In the 1996 blockbuster Twister, a semi-articulated fuel truck is lofted and flung by a writhing tornado into the path of the movie’s storm-chasing heroes. Doubtless the filmmakers conceived the scene to demonstrate the fake tornado’s terrible strength, but as a new study concludes, the movement of vehicles can actually be used to evaluate the strength of real tornadoes. Marius Paulikas and Thomas Schmidlin of Kent State University and Timothy Marshall of Haag Engineering examined field surveys of 959 passenger vehicles struck by tornadoes in 1994–2008. After classifying the vehicles according to whether they had been unmoved, displaced, rolled, or lofted, the researchers correlated the movements with the tornadoes’ strength as determined by the damage inflicted on houses, trees, and other structures. For category EF3 and EF4 tornadoes, whose 136–200 mph winds can knock over trains and destroy entire stories of houses, 63% of cars were displaced, with 15%...
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1 March 2016
March 01 2016
Citation
Charles Day; Using cars to gauge tornado strength. Physics Today 1 March 2016; 69 (3): 21. https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.3102
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