A column of air that spins rapidly is called a tornado. Tornadoes typically form during severe thunderstorms when warm moist air meets cold dry air, creating a rotating column of air that extends from the base of a thunderstorm to the ground.
The pressure inside a tornado funnel is lower than the pressure outside. This pressure difference is a key factor in the formation and strength of tornadoes, as the low pressure inside the funnel contributes to the destructive force of the winds associated with tornadoes.
How does changing the speed at which the bottle is spun affect the size or duration of the tornado created inside it?
Before a tornado hits the ground, a rotating column of air forms in the storm cloud known as a funnel cloud. This funnel cloud extends towards the ground, and once it makes contact, the tornado is then officially considered to have touched down.
The winds at the outer edge of a tornado typically spin faster than those closer to the center. This is due to the conservation of angular momentum, where the outer winds travel a longer distance in the same time as the inner winds, causing them to speed up.
A tornado that spins in the opposite direction is known as an anticyclonic tornado. These tornadoes are rare and rotate clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and counterclockwise in the Southern Hemisphere.
The wind in a tornado spins accordingly to the temperature of the air
There is no real word that starts with "a" that means tornado. However there is something called an anticyclonic tornado. An anticyclonic tornado is a rare variety of tornado that spins opposite of the normal direction (i.e. it spins clockwise if in the northern hemisphere and counterclockwise if in the southern.)
because it twists as it spins
Pressure decreases sharply, reaching its lowest at the center of the tornado. This pulls air toward the center of the tornado and then drawn into the tornado's updraft. The tornado spins as it originates from a larger circulation called a mesocyclone.
A tornado that spins in the opposite direction from normal (e.g. clockwise in the northern hemisphere) it is called an anticyclonic tornado.
hehe maybe a cow in a tornado? :P
When a tornado spins faster its winds carry more force, so the tornado can cause more severe damage than it could before. Under some circumstances the increase in speed can trigger a phenomenon called vortex breakdown. In this process air at the center of the tornado begins to sink, forcing the tornado to widen. The collision between outward moving air from the center of the tornado and inflow toward the tornado then results in the formation of a series of smaller vortices within the tornado.
Considering that you shouldn't go outside during a tornado, yes. You are much safer inside.
Air density inside a tornado is about 5-10% less than that of the air surrounding it.
Inside a tornado, temperatures can vary widely. They can range from near freezing to over 100 degrees Fahrenheit, depending on the conditions and the materials being carried within the tornado.
The only cloud you will actually find inside a tornado is the condensation funnel. Other clouds, such as the wall cloud and cumulonimbus are outside the tornado itself.