The damage from a tornado is generally more severe than that of a tropical storm or hurricane, but is limited to a much smaller area. Hurricanes and tropical storms can cause damage over enormous areas, so the total amount of damage done is greater.
This cannot be answered simply, as both hurricanes and tornadoes vary greatly in how bad they are. The impacts of both tornadoes and hurricanes can range from negligible to devastating. That said, the very worst hurricanes can be far deadlier and more destructive than the worst tornadoes.
May on averages experience the most tornadoes.
yes
Oh, what a lovely question! Tornadoes and tropical cyclones are both powerful forces of nature, but they are different in size and characteristics. Tornadoes are usually smaller in size, with a narrow and intense rotating column of air, while tropical cyclones are much larger, spanning hundreds of miles with strong winds and heavy rain. Each one is unique and beautiful in its own way, just like every brushstroke on a canvas.
It varies. Technically a cyclone can be almost any large scale low pressure system with a closed circulation, and most such systems are not damaging. However, hurricanes and similar storms, which are a kind of cyclone, can cause far more damage and have much higher death tolls than tornadoes. Both the costliest and deadliest natural disasters in U.S. history were hurricanes (Hurricane Katrina and the 1900 Galveston hurricane respectively). It can be even more complicated however, as cyclones can cause tornadoes.
No. Tropical storms develop over warm ocean water and don't remain tropical storms more than a couple hundred miles inland. Even then, Minnesota gets its fair share of nasty storms, including tornadoes, even if it does not get tropical storms.
The winds in a tornado are stronger than those found in other storms. The fastest winds on earth are found in tornadoes. Other than tropical cyclones (e.g. hurricanes and typhoons), tornadoes are the only kind of storm that will commonly produce winds well over 100 mph. This can occur in other storms, but it is rare. In a few cases, winds approaching and even exceeding 300 mph have been recorded in tornadoes. This means that tornadoes can cause much more severe damage than other storms. Futhermore, unlike in other storms where winds are mostly horizontal, the wind in a tornado is directed upward in addition to rotating. This allows the winds to lift debris into the air, adding to its destructive potential. Tornadoes are also among the most difficult storms to predict.
The tornado (or more properly, waterspout) was not given a name as tornadoes are not named.
Both tornadoes and dust storms are dangerous wind storms that are can lift dust into the air. Other than that they are quite different. A dust storm consists of primarily straight-line winds while a tornado spins about its center and is generally much smaller but more destructive.
Hurricanes and tropical storms are both named. Hurricanes have more detailed and already thought of names, while tropical storms aren't as important.
Tornadoes are very destructive along a narrow path of land, but hurricans cover a much larger area.
Florida has a very warm, moist, almost tropical climate. This provides a lot of energy to fuel thunderstorms that are often triggered by weather fronts that bass through. Some of these storms can produce tornadoes.
No, tornadoes are not tropical phenomena. Tornadoes typically occur in regions with strong temperature contrasts, such as the central United States, where warm, moist air collides with cool, dry air to create the conditions for tornado formation. Tropical cyclones can sometimes produce tornadoes, but tornadoes are not a defining characteristic of tropical systems.
Tornadoes can occur almost anywhere, but they tend to be more common and more destructive in some areas than in others. Since tornadoes are a weather phenomenon, their prevalence is largely controlled by a region's climate. A region must have the right combination of moisture, instability, wind shear, and weather systems to trigger severe storms.
Tornadoes are more common than people realise in Australia, but they are not on the scale as that seen in parts of the US. There is no restriction on where they occur, as they have been reported during storms in each of the states, from sub-tropical Queensland down to dry South Australia.
Compared to tornadoes, yes. Tornadoes generally do not cause much erosion. With storms, it is tricky, as many landslides are triggered by storms. However, in areas prone to landslides, such events likely cause the greates portion of erosion.
Hurricanes are a tropical weather event and rarely make it as far north as Canada. Even when they do they are rarely very strong. The climate of the United States is generally warmer than that of Canada, making it more prone to the violent storms that produce tornadoes