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Experience a Virtual Tornado: Causes, Effects, and Safety Measures

Learn about tornadoes, their formation, and the damage they can cause. Discover the difference between tornado watches and warnings and find out how to stay safe during a tornado. Experience a virtual tornado and understand the necessary precautions to take.

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Experience a Virtual Tornado: Causes, Effects, and Safety Measures

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  1. Causes and Effects Experience a Virtual Tornado Tornadoes

  2. What Is A Tornado? A tornado is a violent windstorm characterized by a twisting, funnel-shaped cloud. It is spawned by a thunderstorm (or sometimes as a result of a hurricane) and produced when cool air overrides a layer of warm air, forcing the warm air to rise rapidly. The damage from a tornado is a result of the high wind velocity and wind-blown debris. Tornado season is generally March through August, although tornadoes can occur at any time of year. They tend to occur in the afternoons and evenings: over 80 percent of all tornadoes strike between noon and midnight.

  3. How the column of air begins to rotate is not completely understood by scientists, but one way the rotation appears to happen is when winds at two different altitudes blow at two different speeds creating wind shear. For example, a wind at 1000 feet above the surface might blow at 5mph and a wind at 5000 feet might blow at 25mph. This causes a horizontal rotating column of air.

  4. If this column gets caught in a supercell updraft, the updraft tightens the spin and it speeds up (much like a skater's spins faster when arms are pulled close to the body. A funnel cloud is created.

  5. The rain and hail in the thunderstorm cause the funnel to touch down creating a tornado.

  6. Fujita - Pearson Tornado Scale F-0: 40-72 mph, chimney damage, tree branches broken F-1: 73-112 mph, mobile homes pushed off foundation or overturned F-2: 113-157 mph, considerable damage, mobile homes demolished, trees uprooted F-3: 158-205 mph, roofs and walls torn down, trains overturned, cars thrown F-4: 207-260 mph, well-constructed walls leveled F-5: 261-318 mph, homes lifted off foundation and carried considerable distances, autos thrown as far as 100 meters

  7. What Is A Tornado? When a tornado threatens, individuals need to have a safe place to go and time to get there. Even with advances in meteorology, warning times may be short or sometimes not possible. Lives are saved when individuals receive and understand the warning, know what to do, and know the safest place to go.

  8. Tornadoes When a tornado is coming, you have only a short amount of time to make life-or-death decisions. Advance planning and quick response are the keys to surviving a tornado.

  9. Before a Tornado: How to Plan Conduct tornado drills each tornado season. Designate an area in the home as a shelter, and practice having everyone in the family go there in response to a tornado threat. Discuss with family members the difference between a "tornado watch" and a "tornado warning." Contact your local emergency management office or American Red Cross chapter for more information on tornadoes.

  10. Have disaster supplies on hand: • Flashlight and extra batteries • Portable, battery-operated radio and extra batteries • First aid kit and manual • Emergency food and water • Non-electric can opener • Essential medicines • Cash and credit cards • Sturdy shoes

  11. Tornado Watches and Warnings A tornado watch is issued by the National Weather Service when tornadoes are possible in your area. Remain alert for approaching storms. This is time to remind family members where the safest places within your home are located, and listen to the radio or television for further developments. A tornado warning is issued when a tornado has been sighted or indicated by weather radar.

  12. Tornado Danger Signs • An approaching cloud of debris can mark the location of a tornado even if a funnel is not visible. • Before a tornado hits, the wind may die down and the air may become very still. • Tornadoes generally occur near the trailing edge of a thunderstorm. It is not uncommon to see clear, sunlit skies behind a tornado.

  13. PICTURES

  14. QUIZ WHAT CAUSES A TORNADO TO FORM? WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A TORNADO WATCH AND A TORNADO WARNING? WHAT IS SOMETHING YOU CAN DO TO STAY SAFE IF A TORNADO WARNING IS ISSUED? WHAT ARE SOME IMPORTANT ITEMS TO HAVE ON HAND IF A TORNADO IS HEADED YOUR WAY?

  15. Storm Footage The End

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