F2 indicates a fairly strong tornado that will tear roofs from well-built houses, lift, small cars, demolish trailer homes, and snap large trees.
An F2 tornado does not have any particular size. That is not how the scale works; it rates tornadoes based on damage. An F2 tornado (EF2 as of February 2007) is a tornado that tears roofs from well-built homes, derails trains, and destroys trailers. Winds in an EF2 are estimated at 111 to 135 mph.
F2 wind speeds were originally esitmated at 113-157 mph. The new Enhanced Fujita scale has adjusted that estimate to 111-135 mph.
In an F2 tornadoes, houses will often lose their roofs, but most walls will remain standing. Weaker structures such as barns and trailer homes may be completely destroyed. Large trees are often snapped or uprooted.
The Fujita Scale rates tornadoes from F0 to F5 based on the severity of the damage they do.F0 is the weakest but most common category. F0 damage includes missing shingles, broken tree limbs, trees with shallow roots uprooted, gutters taken down and some trailers overturned. About 55% of tornadoes are rated F0F1, the next lowest category, is also the second most common. F1 damage includes severely stripped house roofs, severely damaged or mostly destroyed trailers, collapse porches and roofs, and broken windows. About 25% of tornadoes are rated F1F2 is the beginning of what care called significant tornadoes. F2 damage includes roofs torn from frame houses, trailers completely demolished, and cars lifted. large amounts of debris may start to fly. About 15% of all tornadoes are rated F2.F3 is the third strongest and third least common category of tornado. F3 damage includes many or most of the walls in a well-built home collapsed, sometimes with just a few left standing. Most trees will be uprooted. About 4% of tornadoes are rated F3.F4 is the beginning of what are called violent tornadoes. F4 damage consisted of well-built houses completely leveled and left as piles of rubble and trees stripped of their bark. About 1% of tornadoes are rated F4.F5 is the strongest and rarest category on the Fujita scale classified as incredible. F5 damage consists of well-built houses being swept clean off their foundations. Sometimes houses may be carried or thrown large distances. Pavement may be peeled from roads. Less than 0.1% of tornadoes are rated F5.
No. First of all, the ratings of tornadoes are based on damage, not size. EF1 is the second weakest category of tornado (there is also an EF0). These tornadoes generally do moderate damage. EF5 is the strongest category. Such tornadoes cause catastrophic damage. Although not always, an EF5 tornado is typically much larger than an EF1.
Yes. F0, F1, F2, F3, F4, and F5. The ratings on what is called the Fujita scale are based on damage.
Yes, Pima County, Arizona has had tornadoes as strong as F2.
In the United States, strong tornadoes, counted as those rated F2 or higher, account for about 11% of all tornadoes.
Those are ratings on the Fujita Scale, which rates the intensity of a tornado based on the damage it causes. The ratings run from F0 at the weakest to F5 at the strongest. The damage is used to estimated wind speed. An F2 is a fairly strong tornado (most tornadoes are F0 or F1) with damage classed as "significant". Typical F2 damage include roofs torn from well built homes, trailers obliterated, and large trees snapped. An F5 tornado is extremely violent with damage classed as "incredible." Typical F5 damage includes well-built houses wiped clean off their foundations and reinforced concrete structures destroyed.
Yes, tornadoes can occur in England, but they are relatively rare compared to tornadoes in other parts of the world like the United States. England experiences about 30 tornadoes per year on average, but they are generally weaker and cause less damage than tornadoes in other regions.
An F2 tornado does not have any particular size. That is not how the scale works; it rates tornadoes based on damage. An F2 tornado (EF2 as of February 2007) is a tornado that tears roofs from well-built homes, derails trains, and destroys trailers. Winds in an EF2 are estimated at 111 to 135 mph.
No. Tornadoes do not damage the atmosphere.
Trailer parks do not attract tornadoes. This is a misconception created by the fact that tornadoes rated F1 and F2 tornado can destroy a trailer but usually not a house. To destroy a house of standard or above standard construction would normally take an F3 or stronger tornado, tornadoes this strong are not as common as F1 and F2 tornadoes. Because a tornado does not have to be particularly intense to cause catestrophic damage to a trailer park, a tornado that strikes one is more likely to recieve media coverage.
The stronger a tornado the more energy it takes and most storms do not have the energy to produce a tornado stronger than F1 or are not organized enough to focus that energy into a tornado. Additionally, tornado ratings are based on damage and some tornadoes stay in open fields, causing no damage. Such tornadoes are rated F0.
F2 is a rating on the Fujita scale, which assess tornado intensity based on damage. The scale runs from F0 at the weakest to F5 at the strongest. F2 indicates a strong tornado (most tornadoes are F0 or F1) that can tear the roof from a well-built house and lift cars off the ground.
84 tornadoes hit Connecticut from 1950 to 2009. Most of them have been of F0 to F2 intensity.
It is a matter of intensity. Not only are tornadoes not as common in Australia, but they are generally not as strong. The strength of tornadoes is rated on the Fujita scale, which has six categories, ranging from F0 for the weakest tornadoes to F5 for the strongest. Australia rarely gets tornadoes stronger than F2. Such tornadoes can cause fairly significant damage, but don't wipe out entire neighbourhoods and rarely kill. By contrast, the United States usually gets at least several F4 tornadoes every year and gets F5 tornadoes every few years. These are the tornadoes that cause the catastrophic damage that makes national and international news.