A tornado made of air is a tornado. Part of the definition of a tornado is "a violently rotating column of air."
No, a tornado is not a form of matter. It is a natural phenomenon in the atmosphere characterized by a rotating column of air extending from a thunderstorm to the ground. Tornadoes are composed of air and do not have a physical substance of their own.
A tornado typically consists of a rotating column of air called a vortex, which is surrounded by a condensation funnel made up of water droplets or debris. It also has an updraft at its center, where warm air rises rapidly, and a downdraft around the periphery where colder air descends.
A tornado is made almost entirely of air, with smaller amounts of water, dust and debris. Since air is compressible, a tornado will vary in density depending on temperature, elevation, ambient pressure, and the intensity of the tornado. Generally, density would be between 800 and 1,200 kg/m^3.
The funnel of a tornado is condensation, similar to an ordinary cloud. The pressure inside a tornado is quite low. Air that enters a tornado is decompressed and cools as a result. In most cases that air is also rather moist, and the moisture condenses as a result of the cooling. Tornadoes are also made visible by the dust and debris that they pick up.
Air rushes into a tornado due to the low pressure at the center of the storm. The surrounding higher pressure air flows in to fill the low pressure area, creating the strong winds characteristic of a tornado.
A tornado is made of air. Air moves into a tornado and spirals upward at high speed.
A tornado cannot actually be made of water. A tornado can occur on water and suck water into it, but it will still be mostly made of air.
Yes. A tornado is a violent vortex of air. It is made visible by water vapor condensing and dust being lifted by the wind.
No, it is a vortex that is made out of a gaseous mixture (air)
A tornado is made up of violently rotating air. It often contains moisture that has condensed as well as dust and sometimes debris that the tornado has picked up.
Yes. A tornado is pretty much made of air. Although pressure inside a tornado is low it is nowhere near being a complete vacuum.
No, a tornado is not a form of matter. It is a natural phenomenon in the atmosphere characterized by a rotating column of air extending from a thunderstorm to the ground. Tornadoes are composed of air and do not have a physical substance of their own.
There is nothing particularly special about the chemical composition of a tornado. It is essentially just made of air, which is mostly made of nitrogen and oxygen with smaller amounts of water vapor (some of which may condense inside the tornado), argon, carbon dioxide, and trace amounts of other gasses.
A tornado is essentially a vortex of air. Usually the moisutre in the air in a tornado will condense into water droplets, forming a visible funnel cloud. Tornadoes will often lift soil into the air, forming a dust whirl. If a tornado hits trees or man-made structures it may pick up debris as well.
No. A tornado is a vortex of air. There is no air in space.
a tornado is a natural disaster because it is made up from nature it is the warm air the cold air mixing together so that is nature that is why it is a natural disaster thank you
No. While the funnel is made visible by condensation, it is mostly air.