There is no particular temperature at which tornadoes happen, but they are most common on hot days and are often followed by a temperature drop.
Tornadoes can form within a wide range of temperatures, but they most commonly occur in environments where warm, moist air near the ground interacts with cooler, drier air aloft. The temperature conditions that contribute to tornado formation are often more complex and involve atmospheric instability, wind shear, and other factors in addition to temperature alone.
When two tornadoes combine, it is known as a tornado outbreak. The resulting tornado can become larger, stronger, and more destructive as it merges with the energy and circulation of the other tornado. The combined tornado can create a wider path of destruction and pose an increased threat to affected areas.
When surface winds slow down in a tornado due to ground friction, the tornado may weaken or dissipate altogether. This is because a tornado's strength is dependent on the fast rotation of air at the surface, so when this rotation slows down, the tornado's intensity is reduced.
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.
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.
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
tornado formation is not based on temperature, but upon storm structure. you cannot use temperature to determine tornados
That is not known. Few measurements have been taken from inside a tornado and few if any of those included temperature.
The wind in a tornado spins accordingly to the temperature of the air
Yes, temperature can rise in a tornado due to several factors. Intense friction between high-speed winds and the ground can generate heat, raising the temperature. Additionally, the high-energy air within the tornado can compress and warm up as it funnels into a more confined space, further increasing the temperature.
they die
The tornado
Yes, normally this happens to planes on the ground when a tornado strikes an airport.
Well, if you fly through sky in the tornado your plane will be crushed.
Nothing happens. The lightning will not affect the tornado.
People have to rush to their basements and hide when the tornado comes. If people are outside, they need to immediately go to the nearby building and hide.
Tornadoes can form within a wide range of temperatures, but they most commonly occur in environments where warm, moist air near the ground interacts with cooler, drier air aloft. The temperature conditions that contribute to tornado formation are often more complex and involve atmospheric instability, wind shear, and other factors in addition to temperature alone.