Tornadoes are typically stronger than tsunamis in terms of wind speed and intensity. Tornadoes are violent rotating columns of air that can produce winds over 300 mph, whereas tsunamis are giant ocean waves caused by underwater earthquakes or volcanic eruptions. However, tsunamis can cause widespread destruction over a larger area due to their long wavelengths.
A large tornado is typically stronger than a small, skinny tornado. The size of a tornado is often an indication of its strength, with wider tornadoes usually having higher wind speeds and causing more damage. However, other factors such as wind speed, duration, and path can also affect a tornado's strength.
A tornado in a bottle project uses liquid to simulate the vortex motion of a real tornado. Both involve rotating air masses creating a funnel shape. However, the scale and force of a real tornado are much stronger and destructive than what can be replicated in a bottle.
It is highly unlikely for a tornado to lift a freight train, as trains are heavy and sturdy. However, a tornado can certainly derail a train or cause damage to train tracks and infrastructure.
Most tornadoes are rated F0-F1 on the Fujita Scale because they are the weakest in strength. These tornadoes are relatively common and usually cause minimal damage. Stronger tornadoes (F2 and above) are less common but have the potential to be much more destructive.
When two tornadoes collide, it is most likely that the stronger tornado will absorb the weaker one. The collision may lead to an increase in size and intensity of the tornado before eventually dissipating.
A tsunami is stronger, buth in terms of energy released and destructive potential. Both can cause total devstation, but a tsunami can do so over a muchlarger area.
In terms of overall energy output and destructive potential, yes.
In terms of overall energy output, a tsunamis is generally stronger. Outside of that, it is difficult to compare the two.
The two are a comparable as apples and oranges. Other than toting up the amount of kilojoules release by each, there is no way to compare the strength of a tsunami and a tornado. The two are quite unrelated. A tornado is a strong whirlwind. A tsunami is a powerful wave in the ocean, usually caused by earthquakes.
Niether. In the unlikely event that a tornado and a tsunami met, the tornado would go right over the tsunami and neither would be significantly affected.
a tsunami for sure, a tornado is just going to throw me to the united states, riding a tsunami has better chances of living than a tornado
They are both kind of strong because a tornado can pick up objects and throw them. tsunamis can send big waves to wash off almost the whole island
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No. A tsunami and a tornado are two completely different things. A tsunami is a large wave or series of waves usually triggered by an underwater earthquake or landslide. A tornado is a violent vortex of air that forms during a thunderstorm. A tornado that forms on water is called a waterspout.
tsunami are bigger and stronger