How do tornadoes form? - James Spann

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  • čas přidán 18. 08. 2014
  • View full lesson: ed.ted.com/lessons/how-do-torn...
    Tornadoes are the most violent storms on Earth, with wind velocities that can exceed 200 miles per hour. How do these terrifying cyclones form? Meteorologist James Spann sheds light on the lifespan of tornadoes as they go from supercell thunderstorms to terrible twisters before eventually dissolving back into thin air.
    Lesson by James Spann, animation by Província Studio.

Komentáře • 2K

  • @flickchick710
    @flickchick710 Před 2 lety +1499

    For anyone who doesn't know the narrator is James Spann also known in Birmingham Alabama as Spann the Man. He is one of the best meteorologists in the United States and when the super tornado outbreak happened on April 27th 2012 he saved thousands of lives (including mine and my husbands) that day by tracking dozens of tornados that were down simultaneously throughout the state. He stayed on the air for over 12 hours that day. This year we had a tornado and he realized on the air that the tornado was headed directly towards his house where his wife was. He stepped out long enough to call and make sure she was safe and came back to continue reporting. He stepped out 20 minutes later to find out that his wife was safe but their house was badly damaged. The man did not stop until the state was in the clear. He's a hero in Alabama and just an all around great man. If your ever in Alabama especially around Birmingham and you try and say something mean about James Spann be prepared for a fight. We're very protective of him around here.

    • @constel6573
      @constel6573 Před 2 lety +39

      i salute him 👏

    • @crashfps
      @crashfps Před 2 lety +10

      james spann is the reason why earth is more polluted

    • @flickchick710
      @flickchick710 Před 2 lety +36

      @@crashfps How so? Please explain I can't wait for this hot take.

    • @crashfps
      @crashfps Před 2 lety

      @@flickchick710 because of him more people are alive and this means more people are polluting the planet so hes done more worse to earth than help it

    • @flickchick710
      @flickchick710 Před 2 lety +15

      @@crashfps Yup thought that was where you were heading with that statement. Aren't you so edgy wanting perfectly innocent people to die. God you must be a blast at parties if ya know you were invited to any. How about this why not take yourself out and you'll be one less person polluting the globe.

  • @chypheirprod9312
    @chypheirprod9312 Před 4 lety +560

    no one:
    tornado: m i n e c r a f t c o w s o u n d.

  • @user-cp1vm4tx9p
    @user-cp1vm4tx9p Před 3 lety +393

    My zoom teacher won’t let me in the meeting so I gotta watch this by myself

  • @babystepsgarden6162
    @babystepsgarden6162 Před 2 lety +137

    Spann the Man! You've been my hero ever since you told the people in a Haleyville trail or park not to wait, but to take shelter. "Go Now!"
    That was quite a few years ago. You saved many lives that night by trusting your instincts, and doing the job you were called to do.
    You will always be a hero to me. ❤️
    God bless and keep you and yours.

    • @Somegoy
      @Somegoy Před 2 měsíci

      I know it's all serious, but trail or park made me laugh lol

  • @sadewiggins680
    @sadewiggins680 Před 8 lety +465

    tornados are made when hot air and cold play tag

    • @xiufenwu3190
      @xiufenwu3190 Před 5 lety +12

      Very funny! Ha ha!

    • @nasersaleh3015
      @nasersaleh3015 Před 4 lety +9

      That’s what I hear every time 😂

    • @lei965
      @lei965 Před 4 lety +3

      That's it but they made it 4:12 long instead of 5 seconds

    • @soldierdoggi6640
      @soldierdoggi6640 Před 4 lety +1

      @@nasersaleh3015 really?

    • @nasersaleh3015
      @nasersaleh3015 Před 4 lety +1

      bubblegum kitty amitnaaq every time I hear a story or something ya that’s what I hear

  • @sysexstudio
    @sysexstudio Před 9 lety +1647

    The narrator's voice sounds exactly like a radio meteorologist. [EDIT, so he IS a meteorologist except on television, thanks everyone]

    • @fgossage
      @fgossage Před 9 lety +101

      The narrator is James Spann, the chief meteorologist of ABC 33/40 in Birmingham, Alabama. You can view some of his tornado coverage video by searching for coverage of the April 27, 2011 tornado outbreak.

    • @sysexstudio
      @sysexstudio Před 9 lety +8

      Thanks for letting me know.

    • @F4FireAndSecurity
      @F4FireAndSecurity Před 9 lety +6

      Fred Gossage or the april 28 2014 tornado outbreak

    • @109palolss8
      @109palolss8 Před 6 lety +3

      ONE DAY I HEARD THE SOUND OF TORNADO WARNING AND IT COULD HAD HAPPENED CAUSE THERE WAS A LOT OF THUNDER AND LIGHTNING AND IT WAS RAINING REALLY HARD. IT WAS LIKE ABOUT 2:48 IN THE MORNING I WAS REALLY SCARED. P.S. THAT WAS 1 YEAR AGO WHEN I WAS IN 3RD GRADE!

    • @joan-angelineconcepcion9675
      @joan-angelineconcepcion9675 Před 6 lety

      And arnold's narrator

  • @carlahead5072
    @carlahead5072 Před 2 lety +78

    Great video James!! You’re Alabama’s best meteorologist and they’re so fortunate to have you looking out for them!! Keep up the great work and continue keeping Alabama’s residents safe during severe thunderstorms and tornadoes ,like on that horrifying day which is April 27th, 2011.

    • @Chloe-zb7tv
      @Chloe-zb7tv Před 10 měsíci +1

      u will not die when it come

  • @timbartschwolfman
    @timbartschwolfman Před 5 lety +54

    James Spann is a good man he helps people in the event of Tornado Outbreak by helping them to prepare and keep them safe

  • @wakemeupinside5526
    @wakemeupinside5526 Před 7 lety +1023

    This guy is my local meteorologist

  • @dogedoge4547
    @dogedoge4547 Před 7 lety +1260

    You gather a bunch of airbenders in one area and make them bend air in swirls.

  • @kristiecosta7073
    @kristiecosta7073 Před 4 lety +40

    I was listening and at the end i was like “what the heck just happened”

  • @safir2241
    @safir2241 Před 5 lety +14

    I think when I was little (like 6 years old or something) I was in the car with my parents & saw a mesocyclone. I was scared to death & kept telling my parents to go back home or park the car. Smart little boy.

  • @lsmrkqj
    @lsmrkqj Před 8 lety +595

    Never experienced a tornado in my life

  • @ColemanCraftFTW
    @ColemanCraftFTW Před 8 lety +983

    Mommy, how are tornados born. When your old enough to Jimmy, when your old enough

    • @cherryflavored460
      @cherryflavored460 Před 8 lety +5

      Lol

    • @hhollenify
      @hhollenify Před 8 lety +2

      omg lol

    • @CodyCombat
      @CodyCombat Před 8 lety +71

      Mommy when do we learn the difference between your and you're? And when do we learn when it's appropriate to put a question mark or a period?

    • @stevenhalliday7297
      @stevenhalliday7297 Před 7 lety +12

      +Cody Windsor no wonder your i mean you're dad hated you and beat your mother. ?.,?

    • @CodyCombat
      @CodyCombat Před 7 lety +11

      steven halliday Nice meme

  • @hgbugalou
    @hgbugalou Před 7 lety +21

    James Spann is one of the most 'aggressive' teachers of meteorology in the business and does so much for t he community far outside of his viewing area as a TV weatherman. His sole reason for doing all these new age things like TED-Ed is to teach people understanding of the weather and he know this is how to reach younger viewers. Dude is awesome.

  • @martymodus7205
    @martymodus7205 Před 2 lety +217

    I'd love to see an updated presentation. I'm under the impression that there's been groundbreaking data collection and compelling computer modeling that has refined our understanding of tornado formation since this was made. The fundamentals might not have changed, but added detail would be interesting.

    • @lennyface5540
      @lennyface5540 Před rokem +3

      like what

    • @harrisonwest4032
      @harrisonwest4032 Před rokem +14

      the stuff specifically about tornadogenesis are completely different now, the whole thing about the rear flank downdraft have been almost completely debunked

    • @skiptalbot
      @skiptalbot Před rokem

      @@lennyface5540 We now know that many if not most tornadoes actually start at ground level. They don't descend out of the storm. This was directly observed with mobile radar and synchronized video on the 2013 El Reno, OK tornado, and is also assumed to be the default mode for non-supercell tornadoes, which stretch pre-existing rotation at the surface. Since the parent updraft is already "surface based", it doesn't need to establish a connection to the ground like the video suggests. Instead, tubes of vertical vorticity are flowing into the storm along a boundary and are amalgamated into a larger vortex below the storm's updraft. When the surface based updraft occludes and contracts, the vortex is stretched, momentum is preserved, and the speed of the flow increases. There's no magic moment where the tornado "touches down". The vortex just continuously increases in intensity at the surface until it starts kicking up dust and debris. That the funnel cloud appears to descend is misleading. It's actually being built downward from below as the pressure continues to drop in the updraft column, which already extends from the surface into the storm's base. To be honest, this whole video should be redone lol.

    • @phoenixfire8226
      @phoenixfire8226 Před měsícem +3

      i know this is an old comment, but yes this video needs updating. tornadoes are caused by wind moving in different directions at different altitudes (wind shear). put a toilet paper roll between your hands (parallel to the floor) and move your hands in opposing directions. the paper roll represents the horizontal tube of air created by wind shear. with proper conditions, warm air entering this system will cause an updraft and take the horizontal shaft created by the wind shear and make it vertical. this elongates the tube of air as it's pushed upwards, and so it begins to spin even more rapidly (imagine pulling in your arms to your body as an ice skater does). conventional wisdom, and everyone on quora, will tell you tornadoes descend from the clouds, but it's simply not true, but the vertical column formed at or near ground level "pulling" the condensation funnel can give that appearance.

    • @martymodus7205
      @martymodus7205 Před měsícem

      @@phoenixfire8226 yes, Connecticut's Fox61 News has a simple 1 minute video, "how does a tornado form" that describes this process, in short. Given the improvement in data available I'm still surprised there aren't more videos showing this in greater detail and I'd love to see these dynamics illustrated with computer models... And Pecos Hank narrating & soundtracking.

  • @Son1_
    @Son1_ Před 5 lety +16

    I never knew I could learn so much things in 4 minutes.

  • @miaespinoza3253
    @miaespinoza3253 Před 8 lety +88

    This helped me out with my homework thanks!! I got a 100! My teacher even asked me what I watched or searched so I told her it was this vid!! My class loved it thanks!!!

  • @DJ_Dava
    @DJ_Dava Před 10 dny +1

    The legendary voice of James spann

  • @patriciahayes2664
    @patriciahayes2664 Před rokem +8

    Meteorologists depend on storm chasers to give them additional information on tornados while those things are on the ground. The storm chasers can observe the locations and actions of the storms and then relay the information back to the meteorologists. In turn, the meteorologists help the storm chasers by telling them what to watch out for regarding the conditions that can spawn twisters. It's a great partnership. 🌪👍😁

  • @caterscarrots3407
    @caterscarrots3407 Před 8 lety +9

    Tornados are not the only things that can result from a supercell. They usually form in low air pressure.
    However there is something called an anticyclone which rotates in the opposite direction as a tornado and looks sort of like an upside down tornado. These form when the air pressure is high.

  • @UWBadgersfan28
    @UWBadgersfan28 Před 9 lety +62

    This was a very nice, concise explanation. It was really quite a nice video. Thanks, James!

  • @katyoutnabout5943
    @katyoutnabout5943 Před 3 lety +2

    My town was in a storm like that once. Three tornados in one night. One destroyed all the big, heritage trees in town, among other typical damage, like broken windows, crushed vehicles, powerlines on the ground. My trampoline ended up three houses down the block, in someone else’s yard. Another tornado took out a wall on my grandpa’s new quonset, but left the adjacent old, rickety barn perfectly fine. The last one destroyed everything on my friend’s farm, except for a tiny little lodge they set up for visitors. I particularly remember the next morning, there was an incredible sense of community as everyone helped clean up.

  • @Kovitlac
    @Kovitlac Před 11 dny

    You guys are so brave to do what you do. I won't even glance out the window to see a tornado. They are truly awe-inspiring and terrifying. I'm glad we've been able to learn so much and work to keep people safe, thanks to those like you.

  • @gaberangel4909
    @gaberangel4909 Před 7 lety +7

    Can't imagine chasing tornados. Even an animated version coming towards me made me feel uneasy lol

  • @darknlovli
    @darknlovli Před 2 lety +7

    Whose watching this after the recent ones in the US? Dec 2021

  • @lacyaubut6751
    @lacyaubut6751 Před 4 lety +9

    I’m glad you know this because i never would have figured it out.

  • @steadyrhythms9571
    @steadyrhythms9571 Před 2 lety +4

    didn't realize james spann did this. he's legendary.

  • @korlu01
    @korlu01 Před 8 lety +432

    I'm stoned right now and did not catch one word of that

  • @EnsoLLC
    @EnsoLLC Před 8 lety +891

    Back then in the Ancient days, people probably think its the Gods being angry.

  • @stellarwind1946
    @stellarwind1946 Před 9 měsíci +2

    The thunder at 2:26 startled me

  • @emperor_sunshine
    @emperor_sunshine Před 4 lety +4

    Hey this man's been my weather man since I've been alive, glad to find his Ted talk

  • @DonkeyFilms
    @DonkeyFilms Před 8 lety +399

    James Spann is my local news weatherman

  • @carlahead2945
    @carlahead2945 Před 7 lety +3

    James,that's a great explanation of tornadoes and I loved the graphics,which helps visualize what's going on.

  • @denelson83
    @denelson83 Před 4 lety +41

    0:30 - Spherical cow! Spherical cow! This is not a drill!

  • @lordcthulhu3589
    @lordcthulhu3589 Před 3 lety +7

    I watched this when I was a kid, keep the good work up dude!

  • @01rai01
    @01rai01 Před 9 lety +325

    Yes but what about sharknadoes

    • @junonovamusic
      @junonovamusic Před 7 lety +14

      rai ZOR Tornado forms over sea near a beach (aka a waterspout), sucks up sharks, and throws them.

    • @jfgamerz5532
      @jfgamerz5532 Před 6 lety +6

      rai ZOR chuck norris throw sharks through a tornado

    • @gtbsatalks
      @gtbsatalks Před 6 lety +1

      rai ZOR its a tornado but instead of cows in it is prople usally see,there are sharks in it instead

    • @SuperSirianRigel
      @SuperSirianRigel Před 6 lety +8

      They are created by terrible writers, producers, and directors. Almost always near a low budget studio. XP

    • @divisix024
      @divisix024 Před 5 lety +1

      What about reggaesharknadoes?

  • @LIVdaBrand
    @LIVdaBrand Před 8 lety +43

    I like being a meteorologist. You can look up and see what's going on. saving lives is what it's about.

  • @stratussol2475
    @stratussol2475 Před 10 měsíci +2

    James Spann, one of the greatest legends in tornadoes

  • @EthanBWeather
    @EthanBWeather Před 6 lety +1

    James Spann might be coming to Indianapolis for the 2018 Central Indiana Severe Weather Symposium!! I am quite excited

  • @OMspot2277
    @OMspot2277 Před 8 lety +153

    It's rotating the wrong way. Unless of course they're using an anti-cyclonic tornado, which is rare.

  • @funsisters5122
    @funsisters5122 Před 7 lety +5

    This is amazing. You actually helped me with my science work. Keep up the good work. This is also helerious

  • @aoarashi3025
    @aoarashi3025 Před 6 lety +1

    There was a miniature dust whirl, about knee-high, on my school sports ground. It lasted about 5 to 10 minutes, and gathered a huge crowd.

  • @guest2007
    @guest2007 Před 6 lety +2

    1:30 rising air create tornado, hot air rises, cold air descend. so turning on car during the rain may cause tornado

  • @12nerdynerd12
    @12nerdynerd12 Před 9 lety +70

    I'm 16 years old and Iive in Florida and it's been getting 90-100 here so ever night when it starts thundering and lightning loud I instantly start to panic no joke and. Ask I do that think to see how close the storm is from my house it starts to get closer I freak out and I taught learning about it would help but not really

    • @Art1611
      @Art1611 Před 8 lety +7

      I'm from Texas and I get very scared too, sometimes :(

    • @michellethenightmaredoll445
      @michellethenightmaredoll445 Před 8 lety +3

      hey at least you don't live in Missouri. where we have tornado Valley.

    • @7thFormVoid
      @7thFormVoid Před 8 lety +6

      +Michelle Tish You mean tornado alley?

    • @michellethenightmaredoll445
      @michellethenightmaredoll445 Před 8 lety +4

      ashwin ajit oops my mistake sorry for that. Thank you.

    • @k9command
      @k9command Před 6 lety +1

      nellybell me too, there is a tornado warning going on which is freaking me out. this is super scary

  • @nicholastammaro9786
    @nicholastammaro9786 Před 7 lety +6

    Thank you so much for this video! I learned a lot, and I'm so interested. It's really fun to learn these storms.

  • @arandompika6879
    @arandompika6879 Před 4 dny

    i love how the van looks like the mystery machine

  • @guiller2371
    @guiller2371 Před 13 dny +1

    In the desert, you can see small circular motions of dust. They look like micro tornados.

  • @davidabram1573
    @davidabram1573 Před 8 lety +18

    Nice video. In a supercell tornado one gets rotating rising hot air on the outside and falling rotating cold air on the inside. A good way to mix hot air with cold air. Also they form ground up and cloud down, although most of the time we only notice the cloud bit. It is bits like draining a plastic bottle with water. It is quicker to swirl the water out and let the air in. Tornados die when the cold air in the cloud warms up sufficiently to no longer sustain the vortex.

  • @pres3356
    @pres3356 Před 8 lety +5

    This makes a whole lot more sense now!

  • @dianegalston100
    @dianegalston100 Před 8 dny

    Boy oh boy, I recognize that voice Mr. James Spann of course. The best meteorologist in Birmingham Alabama. If your from Bama then you know who he his. He was on Fox 6 forever and a day then he went to ABC3340.. if you ask me I would rank him as one of if not the best meteorologist there is. This man knows the weather and can spot a tornado before a tornado starts to even form. Thank you James Spann,

  • @wraiththefurry9467
    @wraiththefurry9467 Před 2 lety +2

    3:03 GIANT FALSE HERE. When debris is spotted underneath what would be a funnel (this could legit just be dust). Only then would it be a tornado.

  • @jfreach
    @jfreach Před 6 lety +7

    This is so good. I love this channel!:)

  • @The-ct1xq
    @The-ct1xq Před 5 lety +12

    0:31 listen for the Minecraft cow moo 😂😂😂😂

  • @anerxu4702
    @anerxu4702 Před 9 měsíci

    This is the perfect tofel material for listening practice. With the moving images, I can better memorize the words and phrases, thanks TED!

  • @maryjaneayuban1929
    @maryjaneayuban1929 Před rokem +2

    Understandable and very helpful. Thank you sir!

  • @koibinyan
    @koibinyan Před 5 lety +4

    Once I was with my best friend.
    We went out to use my bike.
    We got to the court and play something like basketball and then
    A little tornado forms and I don't know how..
    There was no thunderstorms or anything like
    Raining it's just windy.. Really windy

  • @Martin_Gregory
    @Martin_Gregory Před 8 lety +13

    Explanation starts after hype at 1:40

    • @Odin029
      @Odin029 Před 8 lety +4

      +Martin Gregory There's no way to hype a tornado... I mean what could possibly be worse than trying to survive the most terrifying 30 seconds of your life

    • @halreinheimer6637
      @halreinheimer6637 Před 8 lety +3

      911

    • @patricksummers8890
      @patricksummers8890 Před 6 lety

      Martin Gregory Bbbbbbbb. a. PooiiU

  • @pedrohernandez-bm8ln
    @pedrohernandez-bm8ln Před 5 lety +1

    This was really helpful to me! Thanks James! I appreciate it! 😁

  • @bupropionbarbie
    @bupropionbarbie Před 5 lety +1

    i’m from tuscaloosa and he was my local meteorologist and i saw him on my station all the time and during the april 27 tornado. i actually had a near death experience and the tornado almost hit DCH regional medical center. i was 7. my mom was at work and i came with her and we all got down on the floor and thought we were about to die and i met him and he came to my school in i think 5th grade. i sat right beside him to his right and i believe i talked to him.

  • @obsidianwing
    @obsidianwing Před 8 lety +5

    well done

  • @mathellman3099
    @mathellman3099 Před 5 lety +3

    The tornado on screen is rotating clockwise which would make it an anti-cyclonic tornado in the northern hemisphere

  • @WanderingRoe
    @WanderingRoe Před 5 lety

    Great video, thanks so much for sharing this!

  • @pikachulovercaitlin8537
    @pikachulovercaitlin8537 Před 6 lety +1

    I've seen this disaster movie with my dad, it's about when 4 tornados are made and they like come to together to create one big tornado I'm so dramatic in it and I say, "IT'S THE MOTHER OF ALL TORNADOS!!!" and my dad says "Calm down!" literally, I'm so pumped about films like the Titanic and Deep Impact

    • @christopherthomas4421
      @christopherthomas4421 Před 3 lety

      It was three F5's and the old man screams "it's the F15!!!". Haha thanks for the trip dont memory lane.

  • @chezamaye
    @chezamaye Před 2 lety +3

    A dog trying to stop a tornado brought me here.

  • @broadstreetbullies849
    @broadstreetbullies849 Před 5 lety +3

    I'm reading a book about the super outbreak that spann is in. Ur a good bro

  • @melissasim8010
    @melissasim8010 Před 6 lety

    I remember watching a video of a man chasing a tornado. I am not entirely sure that he was the one chasing it, but I was so scared, I started crying for him and hoping he and his friends would live. Luckily he did.

  • @MarshmalloFan
    @MarshmalloFan Před 6 lety +1

    2:21 we also call it a funnel

  • @jocelynjovito2490
    @jocelynjovito2490 Před 6 lety +5

    It made me laughed when he was distracted by a guy who hitched" are you coming for a ride?" hehehe

  • @davinehyai5374
    @davinehyai5374 Před 3 lety +5

    my teacher made me watch this

  • @crumpnetwork8342
    @crumpnetwork8342 Před měsícem

    James spann and Nick Saban the best of the best

  • @eschdaddy
    @eschdaddy Před 2 lety +1

    The man, the legend… James Span everyone! There’s 2 legends: Gary England and James Span!

  • @Thatlsp
    @Thatlsp Před 5 lety +4

    Here right after passing thru oklahoma

  • @theonesemanthatplaysbrutal5192

    0:32:
    Tornado:Wow!This cow is yummy!
    Tornado:*eats cow*
    Cow:MOOOOOOOO!HEEEELLLLLP!

  • @mangalgharami4904
    @mangalgharami4904 Před 4 lety

    Ted- Ed is always exceptional. I don't know why.

  • @cloric1
    @cloric1 Před měsícem

    He after seeing the Nebraska tornado, I learnt about tornadoes 3 decades ago in primary school but being from the UK and not getting them, my knowledge was rusty.

  • @vuchaser99
    @vuchaser99 Před 5 lety +6

    Graphics are apparently Southern Hemisphere...or the strongest anti-cyclonic tornado I've seen

  • @allnewluke1
    @allnewluke1 Před 7 lety +20

    i had an f3 tornado go super close to my home just one mile away

    • @nuttyartist2900
      @nuttyartist2900 Před 7 lety +5

      allnewluke one time thare was a ef4 in my backyard it wrecked hafe of the town I lived in back then

    • @freeenergycorporation
      @freeenergycorporation Před 7 lety

      oh ya I was stuck in the el reno f5 twister Boom

    • @jessiedrew1779
      @jessiedrew1779 Před 6 lety

      They never mentioned that EF5 tornados can have wind speeds of up to 300 MPH!!!!!!!

  • @v4riab1lity77
    @v4riab1lity77 Před 2 měsíci

    1:41 it took me a second to understand this, condensation releases heat because water is returning back into it’s liquid form from it’s gaseous vapour form, which it *requires a certain level of heat to maintain,* so when condensation occurs, it’s letting go of that heat, and that energy still has a bearing or influence on the atmosphere, causing new interactions 😱 ok now to get back to the video 😭

  • @raeganengstrom5754
    @raeganengstrom5754 Před 5 lety +1

    It's not just thunderstorms. I have been studying tornados a weather for about 2 years now. It also comes from wall clouds too.

  • @purplu109
    @purplu109 Před 9 lety +6

    thanks for helping me pass my science assignment guys :)

  • @oklifrederick1734
    @oklifrederick1734 Před 5 lety +4

    This is incorrect..the rising columns of air are not warm air currents they are actually cold air. We fed all these parameters into a supercomputer and it told us we have been wrong about warm air being the driving force.

  • @joycegailmengulloampong1315

    Your videos are good, that's why I've learned a lesson from you... thanks

  • @RodLois-dc6hy
    @RodLois-dc6hy Před 20 dny

    Once this guy came to my elementary school talking about almost everything is this video

  • @aghaanantyab
    @aghaanantyab Před 8 lety +3

    tornado occures when air rises due to condensation that releases heat, but the question is:
    1:37 what causes condensation??? storm???
    if heat causes tornado, it means that tornado can be developed by burning a forest in a cold weather

    • @grazglednica
      @grazglednica Před 8 lety +1

      my best guess is that's when fire tornadoes occur.
      check out some vids, they're pretty small but creepy nontheless

    • @depressedrobot2491
      @depressedrobot2491 Před 7 lety +1

      When hot air rises, it gets into colder zones of the atmosphere, so it cools down. But you have to remember: The amount ofvapor air can carry depends on the temperature. Colder air can carry less vapor than hot air. So, if the hot, rising air is saturated, water will condense as the air cools down (by rising), releasing heat. This heat will then cause parts of the air to rise even more (causing very high clouds) and condense even more. It's like a chain reaction that happens when large amounts of hot air start rising.

    • @naveenpatil9647
      @naveenpatil9647 Před 6 lety

      When land heats up.. Air becomes light rises up.. As it rises..because of fall in temperature.. It becomes saturated i.e water holding capacity decreases n condensation occurs.. Simple..

  • @toxic4138
    @toxic4138 Před 7 lety +32

    its called storm chasers

    • @alexandradobbs794
      @alexandradobbs794 Před 7 lety +2

      Everyone else knows what a meteorologist is 🤔🇨🇱

  • @MissDJErinB
    @MissDJErinB Před 2 lety +1

    James Spann is the man!!

  • @mjcharles3452
    @mjcharles3452 Před 5 lety +2

    There was a tornado 🌪 at my school today. We were all crying. I WAS SO SCARED.

  • @AliHSyed
    @AliHSyed Před 8 lety +132

    god damn tornados are weird

  • @jeremylallawmsanga9008
    @jeremylallawmsanga9008 Před 4 lety +3

    it's more intresting when it starts with a Quote

  • @user-mu7xp3uq2e
    @user-mu7xp3uq2e Před 5 lety +1

    Is this crazy week over yet?

  • @stormysamreen7062
    @stormysamreen7062 Před 5 lety

    Such specific conditions needed for a tornado to form, yet still the US experiences over 1000 annually.

  • @WyIbert
    @WyIbert Před 8 lety +3

    Ahhh, James James James... You are awesome...

  • @partingofways
    @partingofways Před 9 lety +5

    i rather liked the straight facts, the topic was interesting enough as is.

  • @georgiastormtrackers8730

    I had no idea this was James Spann. You go James!

  • @x4tfxChallenger
    @x4tfxChallenger Před 3 lety +2

    James Spann the man!

  • @soplet6121
    @soplet6121 Před 7 lety +3

    I watched the movie "Twister" when I way a boy. I watched the Discovery channel program "Stormchasers" when I was a college student. Nevertheless, it's not has been explained yet, really?!

  • @CreeperKiller-qv8zw
    @CreeperKiller-qv8zw Před 5 lety +9

    The video is so informative, I am surprised it hasn't taken the world by storm!
    I love jokes. They really catch people's eyes.

  • @webby3109
    @webby3109 Před 3 lety

    Tornadoes have always fascinated me. I’ve never really seen one in real life, though if I had, I probably wouldn’t be typing this right now. I mean, I did see one forming once, but I didn’t see a full blown one.

  • @ajaybhat1161
    @ajaybhat1161 Před 6 lety

    Best animation and sound effects ever!!