Physical Geography 101
Tornadoes
Tornado
Rapidly rotating winds around a small area of intense low pressure.
Commonly as twisters or cyclones.
Basic Stats
Diameter - 100 to 600 m average (300-2000 ft)
can range from a few meters to 1600 m (1 mile)
Movement - SW to NE
>Ground Speed - 35-75 kph average (20-40 knots) (23-46 mph)
Duration - few minutes to hours
Path Length - 7 km average (4 miles)
Rotation - counterclockwise and clockwise (rare) in the Northern Hemisphere
Enhanced Fujita Scale
This is a scale based on wind speeds used to categorize tornados
| Scale | Speed mph | Speed kph |
|---|---|---|
| EF0 | 65-85 mph | 105-137 kph |
| EF1 | 86–110 mph | 138–178 kph |
| EF2 | 111–135 mph | 179–218 kph |
| EF3 | 136–165 mph | 219–266 kph |
| EF4 | 166–200 mph | 267–322 kph |
| EF5 | >200 | >322 kph |
Stages of Tornado Development
1) Dust-Whirl Stage - swirling dust marks tornado circulation
2) Organizing Stage - tornado increases strength/intensity; funnel cloud extends downward
3) Mature Stage - damage is most severe; funnel diameter is at its maximum; funnel is nearly vertical
4) Shrinking Stage - decrease in funnel diameter; increased funnel tilt; narrowing of damage swath at surface
5) Decay Stage - funnel becomes rope-like, contorted, dissipates
Tornado Formation
Formation along Polar Front
Formation along Dry Line
Tornado Alley
Unique Conditions:
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Outline for the video Tornado.
The outline provided below is simply a list of the major topics covered in the video and is not intended to be a substitute for viewing the video.
Tornado Alley
Tornado Characteristics and Formation
Tornado Chasing
Tornado Experiments
Barneveld, Wisconsin