Tornadoes
No, tornadoes do not suck things in. They are powerful rotating columns of air that destroy objects in their path through a combination of strong winds and flying debris. The pressure difference created by the tornado can cause objects to be sucked into the vortex, but the tornado itself does not actively "suck" things in.
A vacuum cleaner simulates a tornado by creating a spinning vortex that sucks in debris and dirt. Similar to a real tornado, the swirling motion creates a low-pressure system that pulls objects toward the center. The intense suction power of a vacuum cleaner resembles the strong winds in a tornado that pick up and carry objects.
A tornado forms when a mesocyclone, a powerful, rotating updraft found in some thunderstorms, tightens an intensifies. As a result, the tornado has a very powerful updraft that can lift objects off the ground.
Unlike other extreme wind events, air in a tornado moves rapidly upward in addition to rotating rapidly. This upward movement of air creates and upward force, which can lift objects off the ground. The stronger the tornado, the larger the things that can be picked up.
A tornado can cause significant damage by generating extremely strong winds that can destroy buildings, uproot trees, and toss objects like debris and vehicles. It can also create a vacuum effect that can suck up and carry away objects in its path.
people plan for a tornado by just get all the things you think you need for a tornado andthats it
The Fujita scale really measure only one thing: the intensity of a tornado based on damage severity.
before a tornado it is usally calm after a strong tornado there is lots of debris and during a tornado there are things flying everywhere
you have to duck and tuck
The four main states of Tornado Alley in the United States are Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska. These states are known for having a higher frequency of tornadoes due to the unique combination of geography and weather patterns that create favorable conditions for tornado formation.
Tornadoes and hurricanes are two different things. A tornado on water is called a waterspout.
Well there's nothing you CAN do when you're in a tornado! You just have to hope and pray you get out of it alive.
No. While a tornado and a cyclone have a number of things in common, they are two different things. A tornado is a small-scale circulation that is dependent on a parent storm cell. A cyclone is a large-scale circulation that is its own independent weather system.
A tornado rips building by the wind speeds and other debris that the tornado is swirling around, so there are lots of things that a tornado can do to a building.
The area in which the tornado happens can erode the area away cause the animals that lived there to have no home or die of the tornado
There is no before or after Tornado Alley. Tornado Alley is a place, not an event.Before a tornado outbreak the weather is often hot and humid. After the outbreak it is usually cooler and drier, but many areas are heavily damaged.
What goes up, must come down. The tornado simply carries stuff downwind and deposits them.