Can you stop a tornado with a bomb?

No one has tried to disrupt the tornado because the methods to do so could likely cause even more damage than the tornado. Detonating a nuclear bomb, for example, to disrupt a tornado would be even more deadly and destructive than the tornado itself.
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Can you stop a tornado with an explosion?

The heavy-handed nature of using a massive explosion to stop a tornado is therefore possible, but not practical.
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What could stop a tornado?

Research indicates that in order to form, a tornado needs both a cold, rainy downdraft and a warm updraft. To stop a tornado from forming, just heat this cold downdraft until it's cold no longer. And how would one do this, you ask? Simple: Blast it with beams of microwaves from a fleet of satellites.
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What is the best defense against a tornado?

Go to the basement or an inside room without windows on the lowest floor (bathroom, closet, center hallway). If possible, avoid sheltering in any room with windows. For added protection get under something sturdy (a heavy table or workbench). Cover your body with a blanket, sleeping bag or mattress.
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Why do tornadoes never hit cities?

(United States Census Bureau)

These data tell us two things: First, since urban areas only cover 3% of America's land surface, it's more difficult for a tornado to strike a city because 97% of the nation is not urbanized (which is likely why many people believe cities are protected from twisters).
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How To Stop a Tornado



Can a skyscraper survive a tornado?

It is believed skyscrapers are structurally sound enough to withstand even the strongest tornadoes. However, high winds, air pressure fluctuations and flying debris will shatter their windows and may tear away exterior walls.
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Can tornadoes be invisible?

Reality: Tornadoes can be obscured or even invisible due to rain or nearby clouds.
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What happens if a tornado hits you?

Tornado Strength and Speed

The winds are blasting, and you're most likely to die from constant bombardment into heavy, sturdy objects than being killed by the tornado directly. Other fatalities occur from hitting things like trees, power lines, and houses.
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Can you hear a tornado coming?

As the tornado is coming down, you should hear a loud, persistent roar. It is going to sound a lot like a freight train moving past your building. If there are not any train tracks near you, then you need to take action.
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What causes most deaths during a tornado?

Flying debris causes most deaths and injuries during a tornado.
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What is a tornado bomb?

Explosive cyclogenesis (also referred to as a weather bomb, meteorological bomb, explosive development, bomb cyclone or bombogenesis) is the rapid deepening of an extratropical cyclonic low-pressure area.
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Can a wall stop a tornado?

Talk about an epic fail. Building gigantic,1,000-foot tall-walls across the central USA wouldn't stop tornadoes and might actually cause other problems, says a recent study in the Electronic Journal of Severe Storms Meteorology.
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What is the biggest tornado ever?

Officially, the widest tornado on record is the El Reno, Oklahoma tornado of May 31, 2013 with a width of 2.6 miles (4.2 km) at its peak.
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Can you nuke a tsunami?

3,700 test explosions were conducted over a seven-month period. The tests revealed that a single explosion would not produce a tsunami, but concluded that a line of 2,000,000 kg (4,400,000 lb) of explosives about 8 km (5.0 mi) off the coast could create a destructive wave.
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What does a tornado smell like?

Tornadoes' Terrible Sulphur Scent

According to a number of storm chasers, including the late Tim Samaras, the air sometimes smells of a mix of sulfur and burning wood (like a freshly lit match) during a tornado.
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Can dogs sense a tornado?

Dogs are able to use all of their senses to predict when a tornado and storm are coming. Your dog can detect small changes in barometric pressure, which changes and charges when a storm is approaching a location - this is what alerts the dog that there is something changing with the pressure in the air.
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Why is it calm before a tornado?

The rising warm air forms a partial vacuum, which pulls cold air from high above. That helps drive the rain down. But this partial vacuum also pulls in air from all sides of the storm front. Air moving away from the partial vacuum gets pulled back – so the area in front of the storm experiences a calm.
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Has anyone survived a tornado?

Chris Tuveng, Dallas, Texas, 2019. Last year several Tornados swept through the area the night of 10/20/2019. I unfortunately got “sucked” into one of them. The most severe Tornado was an EF3 that was on the ground for 30 minutes and 15 miles.
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Why do your ears pop during a tornado?

causes structural damage during a tornado. It is not the pressure change. The air pressure will drop near a tornado. Many people near a tornado tell of their ears "popping" due to the pressure change.
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What happens if a tornado hits water?

A waterspout is a whirling column of air and water mist.

Waterspouts fall into two categories: fair weather waterspouts and tornadic waterspouts. Tornadic waterspouts are tornadoes that form over water, or move from land to water. They have the same characteristics as a land tornado.
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Can 2 tornadoes join together?

There is no record of two tornadoes joining forces. On rare occasions, a single thunderstorm spawns a new tornado just as an old one is dying off, and then the two offspring of the same thunderstorm system run into each other. The result isn't nearly as cataclysmic as it sounds, though.
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Why are tornadoes beautiful?

The warm wind in the cell rises, and is capped off by cooler air above it. This causes the supercell to pack itself tightly in one spot and grow outwards from there into what looks like a swirling prophecy of the end-times. The gorgeous yet apocalyptic light is caused by sunlight shining through the cloud funnel.
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Can you outrun a tornado on foot?

Do not try to outrun the tornado. It may be tempting, however, this is not a wise choice. A tornado's path is unpredictable and it can switch directions at random. You could be driving away from a tornado when it suddenly charges down your path.
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What if a tornado hit a nuclear power plant?

There is a history of tornados and hurricanes hitting nuclear plants, and there's been no damage to the core reactors. In 2008, a tornado hit a nuclear reactor at Kansas State University. The building took damage, but the steel-reinforced concrete walls protected the reactor.
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