Tornadoes vary widely in size. Small tornadoes in their dissipating stage may be only a few feet wide, while on rare occasions tornadoes have been recorded at over 2 miles wide.
A large tornado is typically stronger than a small, skinny tornado. The size of a tornado is often an indication of its strength, with wider tornadoes usually having higher wind speeds and causing more damage. However, other factors such as wind speed, duration, and path can also affect a tornado's strength.
There is no particular size, as tornado ratings are based on the severity of the damage caused, not the size of the tornado. That said, F0 tornadoes are typically small. Most are less than 100 yards wide.
There is no real term for the tip of a tornado. A small area of intense suction in a tornado may be referred to as a suction spot.
It is believed that there is a calm "eye" at the center of a tornado. But mostly the winds in a tornado are very strong.
No. An F0 tornado is simple a weak tornado, or one that does little to no damage. A gustnado is a vortex that resembles a tornado that forms in the outflow boundary of a severe thunderstorm. Gustnadoes can occasionally cause damage comparable to an F0 or F1 tornado, but they are not considered tornadoes.
Asia , i am guessing
No, a tornado is a violent, rotating wind storm. The funnel cloud formed by a tornado is usually small compared with other clouds.
Generally not. In most cases a tornado would not cover more than a football field or two. Occasionally a tornado may be large enough to engulf a small town.
tornadoes compared to big state could be very small as of 3ft but the can be big as of over 2 miles which big as half or big as an rural county area
A tornado does not always have an eye. When it does it can be about a quarter of the width of the funnel.
Technically yes, but only because there are more small cities for tornadoes to hit.
A tornado's strength is not determined by the size of its eye. The eye of a tornado is typically small and calm, surrounded by a larger area of intense winds known as the eyewall. The strength of a tornado is measured by its wind speed and the amount of damage it causes, not by the size of its eye.
Depends how large or small the Tornado is.
A typical tornado is about 50 to 100 yards wide.
No. A tornado only affects a relatively small area.
That's a big NO! Tornado is never an ecosystem.It is a weather phenomenon.
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