
Twisters: Formation, Lifecycle & Distribution
- Context (HT): A massive EF3 twister struck the Clayton area of St. Louis, USA.
About Twister
- Commonly known as a tornado, it is a rapidly rotating column of air that extends from a cumulonimbus cloud (usually in a thunderstorm) to the ground.
- Forms a funnel-shaped cloud and is often visible due to condensation, dust, and debris.
- With wind speeds exceeding 480 km/h, these are among earth’s most destructive weather phenomena.
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Types of (Twisters) Tornadoes:
- Supercell Tornadoes: Most intense; develop from rotating thunderstorms.
- Landspouts: Form from surface-level convergence; weaker.
- Waterspouts: Tornadoes over water bodies; common in tropical regions.
- Non-supercell Tornadoes: Associated with squall lines or sea breezes.
- Intensity Measurement (Enhanced Fujita Scale): Classifies by estimated wind speeds and damage:
- EF0: Light damage, winds 105–137 km/h
- EF1 to EF2: Moderate to considerable damage, winds 138–217 km/h
- EF3: Severe damage, winds 218–266 km/h
- EF4 to EF5: Devastating to incredible damage, winds 267 km/h and above.
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Formation of Twister (Tornado)
- Requires a precise combination of thermodynamic instability and atmospheric dynamics:
- Warm, moist air rises from low levels (oceans or plains).
- Cool, dry air from higher altitudes (mountains or polar) overlays it, causing atmospheric instability.
- Wind shear (change in wind speed/direction with height) creates horizontal spinning air. Strong thunderstorm updrafts tilt this horizontal spin vertically, forming a rotating storm core called a mesocyclone.
- The rear-flank downdraft (descending cool air) tightens the rotation, focusing it towards the ground.
- When the rotating column extends from the cloud base to the surface, a tornado forms.
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Lifecycle of a Tornado
- Development: Rotation begins within the storm (mesocyclone stage).
- Maturity: Funnel cloud touches the ground; tornado reaches peak strength and damage potential.
- Dissipation: Updrafts weaken, rotation slows, and the tornado fades.
Geographic Distribution
- United States: The highest tornado frequency is mainly in “Tornado Alley” (Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska) due to the clash of warm, moist Gulf air with cool, dry Rocky Mountain air.
- Other tornado-prone regions: Bangladesh (site of the deadliest tornado in 1989 with 1,300+ deaths), Canada, Argentina, and Australia.
- India: Rare but have caused fatalities and damage in Bihar (2021) and West Bengal (2020).
- Indo-Gangetic Plains & parts of Northeast India are more vulnerable due to local atmospheric factors.
Also Read > Tornado.






















