A typhoon is a tropical cyclone or hurricane of the Western Pacific Area and the China seas. A tornado is a violently destructive windstorm occurring over land, especially in the middle west of America and charctarised by a long funnel shaped cloud extending towards the ground, made visible by condensation and debris
There is no technical difference between a tornado and a twister; they both refer to the same meteorological phenomenon of a rapidly rotating column of air in contact with the ground. "Tornado" is the more commonly used term in the United States, while "twister" is sometimes used as a colloquial or informal synonym.
The pressure inside a tornado funnel is lower than the pressure outside. This pressure difference is a key factor in the formation and strength of tornadoes, as the low pressure inside the funnel contributes to the destructive force of the winds associated with tornadoes.
The low pressure inside a tornado pulls air inward. This air accelerates to great speeds as it enters the tornado, though due to the spin not much of the air actually reaches the center. Generally lower pressure means faster winds, and thus more potential for damage.
In a tornado, the main form of energy is kinetic energy, which is the energy of motion of the swirling air. Additionally, there is potential energy in the form of the storm's convective updrafts and downdrafts, as well as thermal energy created by the temperature difference between the warm air at the surface and the cold air aloft.
A multiple vortex tornado has smaller, short-lived vortices moving around inside of it. The suction vortices have stronger winds than the rest of the tornado and are noted for cutting narrow curved swaths of intense damage. A multiple vortex tornado sometimes has the appearance of two or more tornadoes moving circles. A single vortex tornado is simply one vortex of tornadic wind.
a tornado, typhoon, cyclone, twister, and hurricane are pretty much the same.
The only difference between a hurricane, a cyclone, and a typhoon is the location where the storm occurs.
Antarctica has never had a typhoon or tornado, at least not for millions of years.
Antarctica has never recorded a tornado or a tropical cyclone (hurricane or typhoon).
No. A typhoon is neither underwater, not a tornado. Rather, a typhoon is essentially the same thing as a hurricane. It is a large and intense tropical storm system that brings powerful winds, torrential rain, and large waves. A typhoon is much larger than a tornado and is its own self-sustaining weather system.
Tornado Typhoon
Typhoon, Flood, Earthquake, Tornado and many more.
No. Twister is just an informal word for a tornado.
The only continent that has never has a recorded tornado or tropical cyclone is Antarctica.
A strong tornado is one that is EF2 or stronger. A violent tornado is one that is EF4 or EF5.
There is none; twister and tornado are two words for the same thing. Tornado is the preferred scientific term.
A typhoon is a tropical cyclone with sustained winds of at least 74 mph ocurring in the Pacfic Ocean north of the equator and west of 180 degrees. This means a typhoon is the same thing as a hurricane, only occurring in a different part of the world.A tornado is a violently rotating column of air connecting to the base of a thunderstorm to the ground.Differences between typhoons and tornadoesA typhoon is its own self-sustaining storm system while a tornado is dependent on a larger parent storm cell, which in turn is usually part of a larger sytem.A typhoon is a large-scale system typically a few hundred miles across while a tornado is a small-scale vortex typically no more than a few hundred yards wide.A typhoon takes several days to form and will last for days, sometimes weeks. A tornado typically lasts a few minutes, and rarely more than an hour.A typhoon can only form over warm ocean water, while a tornado usually forms over land.A typhoon causes damage though a combination of powerful winds and flooding from storm surge and heavy rain. A tornado causes damage through wind and debris carried by the wind.Unlike a typhoon, a tornado does not produce rain, though is usually accompanied by it.Tornadoes can produce far stronger winds than typhoons, in some cases exceeding 300 mph.Surface level winds in a typhoon are mostly horizontal, while wind in a tornado has a significant upward component.Wind shear is needed to produce tornadoes, but will cause a typhoon to fall apart.A tornado is often made visible by a characteristic condensation funnel, which is not somthng that occurs with a typhoon.Similarities:Both produce powerful, damaging windsBoth rotate in a cyclonic fashion, that is counterclockwise for those in the northern hemisphere and clockwise in the southern. A typhoon, by definition, occurs in the northern hemisphere, but the same type of storms do occur in the southern hemisphere,only going by different names.The winds in both revolve around a center of low pressure.Both have some upward movement of air.Both get their energy from warm, moist air, though it is less direct for tornadoes.