A way to form a tornado at the side of a tornado. [Image] Many people are watching the movie 'twister' (starring Helen Hunt and Bill Paxton). A clear clip in the movie shows a tornado slaughter and savage. Tornado (meaning thunderstorm from "tronada" in Spanish, "tearing" means rotating) is the most furious natural storm. Tornadoes are funnel shaped, wedge shaped, rope shaped and appear to emerge from the bottom of a huge thunderstorm cloud. It is smaller than other storms like hurricanes, but the tornado makes a strong wind.
Meteorology is a relatively young science, and research on tornadoes is relatively new. It has been studied for about 140 years and has been studied for about 60 years, but the existence of a tornado remains a mystery. Scientists have a good understanding of the development of thunderstorms and moderate pressure and the weather conditions favorable for their formation. However, the steps from the super unit or other respective forming process to the occurrence of tornado and the prediction of cyclones in tornadoes and non-tornadoes are not known and are the focus of many studies.
Tornado tornado is a pillar of violently rotating air spreading from the thunderstorm cloud to the surface of the earth. Because of their shape and role, they are sometimes called twister. Tornado's wind speed is usually less than 100 mph. You can exceed 250 miles per hour with + F4. They usually stay on track below mile and are less than 100 yards. It is wide. Several conditions are necessary for the occurrence of a tornado.
Tornado is an intense rotating pillar that you can see when picking up garbage from the ground or from the air. Tornades are usually visible, but they are not always. An important aspect of the definition is that a tornado or funnel cloud is in contact with the ground. The funnel clouds appear to extend downward from the cumulonimbus cloud. One thing to keep in mind is that this definition is not a truly accepted definition. According to Charles Doswell III of the Mesoscale Meteorological Research Collaborative Research Institute, there is virtually no real definition of a tornado generally accepted and reviewed by the scientific community.