The most likely outcome of a tornado is damage to property and vegetation.
When a tornado funnel reaches the ground, it can cause significant damage by destroying buildings, uprooting trees, and tossing objects into the air. This is the most dangerous phase of a tornado as it can leave a path of devastation in its wake.
The explosion would probably disrupt the tornado. However, the effects of the blast and fallout would likely be worse than anything the tornado could do. Even then, the parent thunderstorm may still go on to produce another tornado.
When two tornadoes collide, it is most likely that the stronger tornado will absorb the weaker one. The collision may lead to an increase in size and intensity of the tornado before eventually dissipating.
During a tornado, heavy rain and hail are the most likely types of precipitation that may fall. Tornadoes are often associated with severe thunderstorms that can produce intense rainfall and hail as the storm system intensifies.
That depends on the tornado. In a single vortex tornado the most damaging part would be the edge of the tornado's core, analogous to the eye wall of a hurricane. In a multiple vortex tornado, the most damaging part would be the subvotices that orbit within the main circulation of the tornado.
A tornado is most likely to happen in the United States in a section called "Tornado Alley". This includes Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas, Nebraska, North and South Dakota, Florida, Missouri, and more. A tornado is likely to form between 3 pm. and 9 pm.
You will be carried to another location and dropped there. Most likely you will not survive.
Tornadoes can occur any time of year but it is most likely to happen during a thundery and harsh spring.
A tornado is most likely to form in the late afternoon or early evening.
A tornado is most likely to be produce from a type of thunderstorm called a supercell.
A tornado can happen at any time of day. Tornadoes occur most frequently in the late afternoon and early evening because that time of day is usually the hottest. Warmer air can cause thunderstorms to intensify, making them more likely to produce a tornado.
The Tri-State tornado was most likely an F5.
Tornadoes most frequently happen in Tornado Alley, a strip of land that goes up the United States Midwest. However, tornadoes can happen almost anywhere. Flat land, like in Tornado Alley, does not interfere with the winds, so the tornado is not dissipated.
Tornadoes are most likely to occur in a region known as Tornado Alley, which includes parts of the central United States like Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska. These areas experience frequent tornadoes due to the clash of warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico with cool, dry air coming from the Rockies.
The most famous tornado today is most likely the Oklahoma City tornado of May 3, 1999. That tornado caused approximately $1 billion in damage.
Oklahoma would be the one most likely to have a tornado. However, all of these states have had tornadoes, and North Dakota is fairly tornado prone.
It depends on how strong the tornado is. If its a weak tornado then most likely it can not, but if it's a very strong tornado it is very possible that it can.