No. It is called a funnel cloud. However, tornadoes are produced by thunderstorms.
A tornado that touches the ground is simply a tornado. Before it touches down it is called a funnel cloud.
Under the right circumstances wind wall blow at different speeds with height. This is called wind shear. This wind shear can create rolling masses of air near the ground. If there is a thunderstorm in the area, usually along a cold front, tit can turn this rolling air vertical and become a supercell, a powerful thunderstorm with a rotating updraft called a mesocyclone. Under the right conditions a downdraft can descend fro the storm and wrap around the mesocyclone, tightening and intensifying the rotation to produce a tornado.
It doesn't. A tornado is a spinning column of air, not water.First, you need thunderstorms, then you need a condition called wind shear, in which the speed or direction of the wind changes with altitude. If the shear is strong enough it can essentially tilt a thunderstorm. This separates the updraft and downdraft of the thunderstorm, preventing them from interfering with one another. This allows the storm to become stronger and last longer.Additionally, if the wind shear is strong enough it can start the air rolling in what is called horizontal vorticity. This horizontal vorticity can then be turned vertical by a thunderstorm's updraft. When this happens, the thunderstorm may start rotating. The rotation is especially strong in an updraft called a mesocyclone. If the storm intensifies rapidly enough, a relatively warm downdraft called a rear-flank downdraft or RFD can wrap around the bottom part of the mesocyclone. This can then tighten and intensify its rotation and bring it down to the ground to produce a tornado.
The force of a tornado comes form a turning, rising mass of air in a thunderstorm called a mesocyclone. Sometimes a downward-moving wind called a downdraft can wrap around the mesocyclone and make it narrower, which causes it to spin faster.
Meteorologists use a radar instrument called Doppler radar to detect tornadoes. Doppler radar can detect the rotation within a thunderstorm, which is a key indicator of possible tornado formation.
Before a tornado touches down it is called a funnel cloud, which looks like a tornado but does not reach the ground. A funnel cloud develops from the mesocyclone of a supercell thunderstorm. A supercell thunderstorm is characterized by the presence of a mesocyclone, which is a deep, continuously-rotating updraft.
The process of a tornado forming is called tornado genesis. Usually a tornado is a funnel cloud before it touches down.
A tornado that touches the ground is simply a tornado. Before it touches down it is called a funnel cloud.
When a tornado has not touched the ground yet, it is called a funnel cloud. A funnel cloud is a rotating cone-shaped cloud descending from the base of a thunderstorm but not reaching the ground. Once it touches the ground, it is classified as a tornado.
A tornado is usually produced by a type of thunderstorm called a supercell.
Yes, a tornado is a rapidly rotating column of air that extends from a thunderstorm to the ground. When it touches the ground, it can cause significant damage due to its strong winds and destructive potential. Tornadoes are typically accompanied by severe weather conditions such as thunderstorms and heavy rainfall.
A funnel-shaped cloud is called a tornado. It is a violent rotating column of air that extends from a thunderstorm to the ground. Tornadoes are capable of causing significant damage and are associated with severe weather events.
A rotating column of air is known as a whirlwind. If it is violent and connects to both the ground and the cloud base of a thunderstorm, it is considered a tornado.
A tornado is most likely to be produce from a type of thunderstorm called a supercell.
A tornado comes from a type of storm called a rotating thunderstorm, but is not a storm, itself.
tornado clouds
A tornado is a violently rotating columns of air in contact with the base of a thunderstorm and the ground. Tornadoes are usually produced by a type of strong thunderstorm called a supercell.