A tornado gets it energy from its parent thunderstorm. The storm gets its energy from instability in the air, often resulting from a collision of warm moist air with cool and/or dry air. The warm moist air is the actual energy source. The water vapor in it holds a surprising amount of energy.
The majority of tornadoes form from supercells, the most powerful type of thunderstorms on earth. Structural differences between supercells and ordinary thunderstorms allow them to release energy more efficiently. The strongest part of a supercell is the mesocyclone or rotating updraft. This is powered by the buoyancy of warm, moist air that in some cases can rise at over 100 mph. A tornado forms when the rotation of a mesocyclone becomes more focused. So essentially the kinetic energy from a vortex several miles across becomes focused in an area just a few hundred feet across.
It is not so much the could themselves that form tornadoes but thunderstorms. Tornadoes typically form from a thunderstorm's rotating updraft called a mesocyclone. The energy that powers all thunderstorms comes from latent heat released as water vapor condenses to form clouds. Some of this energy may be passed on though wind currents to produce a tornado.
Florida has a very warm moist climate, which provides a lot of energy to fuel storm that can produce tornadoes.
Tornadoes do release a rather large amount of energy, though the amount is small compared to other storm types. One way of explaining it is in terms of energy density. While the total amount of energy released by a tornado is less than that of other storms, it is focused in a much smaller area. As a result, damage from tornadoes tends to be severe, but also very localized.
Tornadoes require a fairly specific set of conditions to develop. The factors have to come together in just the right way.
Cumulus clouds don't so much appear in tornadoes. It is more accurate to say that tornadoes descend from cumulonimbus clouds.
yes,there are places that tornadoes go alot and not so much,such as tornado alley
The simple logic goes that a warmer atmosphere would mean more energy is available to power thunderstorms and tornadoes. In reality weather and climate are much more complicated than this, so the actual outcomes are not certain.
No. While many tornadoes have caused an incredible amount of destruction, they are not given names.
you can't, that's impossble
The term cyclone refers to a wide variety of weather phenomena. Many cyclones are not particularly violent, though tropical cyclones (hurricanes and typhoons) generally are. Generally speaking tornadoes are more violent than cyclones but cyclones cover a much larger area and so release much more energy.
Since tornados are not alien they cant just come to earth so i bet they have been around since there was earth
So far no conclusive link has been found between tornadoes and global warming. Extra heat in the atmosphere is a form of energy, and energy drives tornadoes. Scientists predict that global warming will cause more frequent and more severe "weather events". Climate, however, takes time to change so it is unclear yet what is happening.