A tornado can destroy the building, turn over the car, or create fatal flight debris. The tornado violently rotated the air column from the thunderstorm to the ground. What you can do with a tornado:
Learn about the danger of tornado in your area. In the United States, tornadoes in the Midwest and Southeastern are at greater risk
Learn about tornado, such as rotating a funnel shaped cloud, close to a garbage cloud, or a loud noise resembling a freight train.
Please register your community warning system. The emergency alert system (EAS) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) weather radio also provide emergency alerts. If there is an alarm in your community, please understand the warning sounds well.
Look at the weather forecast. Meteorologists can predict when conditions may be suitable for tornadoes
Identify and practice safe shelters in the event of strong winds, such as safe rooms built using FEMA standards or windbreak shelters built according to ICC 500 standards. The next best protection is a small interior window-less room at the lowest level of a sturdy building.
Cover your head and neck with your arms, put furniture, blankets and other materials at home and cover it further.
For current emergency information and instructions, please listen to EAS, NOAA weather radio, or local alarm system.
If you can not reach the building inside or outside the car, cover the head and neck with your arms if possible and cover your body with a coat or blanket if possible.
If it is trapped, please cover your mouth with cloth or face shield so as not to inhale dust. Please send text, hit a pipe or wall, try using a whistle instead of shouting
Please save your phone to respond to emergency situations. After the disaster, the telephone system is frequently busy or busy. Communicate with family members and friends using text messages and social media
The tornado consists of a violent cyclone and a funnel shaped cloud. Tornades are often associated with bad weather such as thunderstorms and hurricanes. The tornado is very destructive. The average width of tornadoes is 300 to 500 yards. Those routes can be extended to 50 miles and funnel clouds will travel from 10 to 50 miles per hour. The wind speed of the funnel cloud is estimated to be 100 - 500 miles per hour. Approximately 2% of all tornadoes are "violent" tornadoes with wind speeds above 300 mph, average route width of 425 yards, average route length of 26 miles. The tornado season peaks in the US from March to August, peaks from April to June, but tornadoes may occur throughout the year.
Tornades usually start with a funnel-like cloud with no strong wind on the surface, not all funnel-shaped clouds evolve into tornadoes. Most tornadoes generate a strong wind on the ground and the funnel is still on the ground, making it difficult to distinguish the difference between funnel clouds and tornado from afar. Occasionally storms will produce multiple tornados simultaneously or continuously. Multiple tornadoes produced by the same stormy cell are known as "tornado". Tornades can occur many times from the same massive storm system. If activity is not interrupted, this is considered a tornado outbreak (the term "tornado outbreak" has various definitions). In the same general area (generated by multiple weather systems), the tornado eruption period is a tornado burst sequence, also called an extended tornado burst.
Most tornado attacks ("tornado season") are from March to June, but tornadoes including violent tornadoes and big tornadoes are recorded every month every month. Two examples were a series of tornados attacking Indiana on November 22, 1992, at least nine people were injured. Another famous non-seasonal tornado is the area where a tornado struck McLean County, Illinois. Even if a tornado is in the winter moon, it will blow off 20 rail cars from their railway and will drive the camper van over 100 yards (91 m).