For a tornado to form, a severe thunderstorm must be present. Severe thunderstorms have large hail, damaging winds, and heavy rain with them. Two specific types of severe thunderstorms are associated with tornado formation: super-cell thunderstorms and frontal thunderstorms. Super-cell thunderstorms are ones that form about 100-150 miles ahead of a cold front, while frontal thunderstorms form along the boundary of a cold front.
Tornadoes form by the following process:
- Warm moist air rises, causing upward vertical motion of air into the thunderstorm.
- The air diverges, or spreads out, above the storm.
- Cold air from about 20,000 feet sinks into the thunderstorm, giving the storm downward vertical motion
- The cold air and the warm air collide in the thunderstorm, and this creates a vortex, or a spinning, in the thunderstorm
- This spinning leads a sinking cloud to form what is called a wall cloud.
- The spinning and sinking intensify, allowing the cloud to get closer to the ground. This is known as the funnel cloud.
- Now the spinning and sinking leads to extreme downward motion. The cloud touches the ground, and when it does it is known as a tornado
The diagram below shows all these steps in motion.