"here we are this big rock in space, we've covered 70% of the surface with water. Then we've got this crazy gas around the entire planet. That's our atmosphere. We're spinning it a thousand miles an hour as we're rocketing through the solar system. The sun is roasting one half and the other half is facing the vast void of space and is cooling." is going to start being my reason to get a second slice of cake for dessert
@Opiuth5 ай бұрын
I approve this message
@jasono19935 ай бұрын
Lmao 😂
@yellowcatmonkey5 ай бұрын
i came to the comments to see this written out 😸💖
@annem78065 ай бұрын
Eat dessert first!
@v.xien.5 ай бұрын
Me when I’m failing a class
@krystalgroshans91294 ай бұрын
When i hear the question about opening your windows during a tornado, my response is always "if the tornado wants your windows open, it'll open em for you"
@Shade019822 ай бұрын
Yeah, it's funny how she just casually mentions flying two-by-four debris in there...
@mattsena77085 ай бұрын
Wanted to be a meteorologist studying tornadoes and thunderstorms since I was 5. Going to school for it next year (when I'm 25) so this video was an instant click and made my heart skip a beat
@mollia56775 ай бұрын
You can do it! Best wishes
@poodook5 ай бұрын
Check out OU
@MalfosRanger5 ай бұрын
Best of luck.
@jaspersversion5 ай бұрын
Me too! I’m starting my journey to my degree in the fall of 25! ❤
@Neotheaterr4 ай бұрын
Awesome! I'm going for atmospheric sciences. I've always loved meteorology.
@jopo79965 ай бұрын
I love the way she answers questions with just the right amount of information. I thought she'd be long winded.
@lordmegatron47895 ай бұрын
ha
@iamafish75 ай бұрын
Ah! Ahhhh haha!
@jaredknapp88865 ай бұрын
You need to rain in the puns.
@triggerhappysound5 ай бұрын
Well played.
@lueroso15405 ай бұрын
Touché 💀💀
@silversurfer88185 ай бұрын
Tornado earrings, nice touch!
@kapitol.5 ай бұрын
Ms. Frizzle!
@Leopardeye5 ай бұрын
My idiotic brain was trying to figure out which state or country these earrings were. And theyre twisters. 🌪️😂
@wxcyrena5 ай бұрын
A friend of mine sells them!
@sirfer69695 ай бұрын
Came to say this
@dolphmanity4 ай бұрын
I never new lady stormchasers existed.
@vince.navarrete5 ай бұрын
Her rant about "and you want me to tell you what's happening in 5 days?" was just too good.
@djtalksick5 ай бұрын
Wired has it down to a science with these videos. 💯💯
@DNAConsultingDetectives5 ай бұрын
I was in southwest part of Wichita with my kids (probably Haysville) April 26th, 1991 when a bunch of tornados where coming through. My kids and I had been in our motel room eating tacos, when my oldest son looked out a high window and said, "That cloud looks like a tornado.". It was! We had only the motel's hallway to take cover in. That initial tornado made significant damage to McConnell AFB. Our building was untouched. After that one passed, all of the motel guests were looking out the door at the end of the hall that opened to the outside. There were a mix of large and skinny tornados (5-7) heading towards our motel. They either passed far north of our location or dissipated. That event was most memorable for the amount of tornadoes we saw that day. I've lived through many a tornado, having lived in south central Kansas for 5 years. Also others in Iowa and Illinois. One was on a 2 day canoe trip where I took shelter in a ditch with my father. The smell is something you'll never forget. And the sound of a freight train. I sure wish we'd had cell phone camera's back on the fateful day.
@iricandescence5 ай бұрын
Wow!
@Zackadeles5 ай бұрын
That sounds like either pure adrenaline or nightmare fuel, depending on who's telling the story. Regardless, that is absolutely insane!
@ninjabiscuit5 ай бұрын
It's interesting that you say the smell was unforgettable. What did it smell like?
@Zackadeles5 ай бұрын
@@ninjabiscuit electricity
@briebel26845 ай бұрын
The smell might be ozone, which can be produced by lightning.
@amberdent6512 ай бұрын
10:30 I'm here post-Helene and mid-Milton. Guess they weren't wrong about that, huh.
@brennanshamburgerАй бұрын
Came here to comment this! What a prediction that was
@matchesburnАй бұрын
...They were wrong about there being 23 named storms, however. There were 13 named storms for 2024. 9 of which were hurricanes.
@brennanshamburgerАй бұрын
@@matchesburn hmm not sure if that is completely accurate. A quick search on NOAA states there was 17 named storms, 7 which reached hurricane status, and 3 which strengthened into major hurricanes. Nonetheless, it’s a prediction as to what is expected it’s not an exact estimate
@ericweeks8386Ай бұрын
@@brennanshamburger Every year, people predict its gonna be the year of all years for hurricanes. At some point, someone will be right. It's like a broken clock is right twice a day. If you keep predicting something, it's bound to happen eventually (within reason of course, predicting 500,000 hurricanes isn't going to happen).
@timothyhouse1622Ай бұрын
@@ericweeks8386 did you not see too powerful hurricanes wreck havoc this year? What hole were you hiding in? Science deniers are 2 digit IQ muppets.
@Canelo33605 ай бұрын
I love that my family's tornado video is still being shared ever where. Washington, Illinois tornado November 2013 filmed till I was pushed down the steps
@GR-bn3xj4 ай бұрын
I have watched a lot about that tornado. That was a crazy one
@TheRealElmoSkateTeam5 ай бұрын
I’m the person that sits on the porch when lighting is happening haha
@marty00635 ай бұрын
Haha, me too. Before we moved I’d sit on the front porch to listen to the thunder and watch the rain. We had a metal roof as well.
@sillyjellyfish24215 ай бұрын
Same, i love watching the lightning
@benwagner50895 ай бұрын
Yeah, I was the idiot kid who'd park my lawn chair in the driveway next to the all-metal mailbox during a thunderstorm. "Nature wouldn't dare interfere with delivery of the mail, right?"
@laxminarayananks15205 ай бұрын
@@marty0063 the electric field inside a conductor is zero, so you have probable chances of escaping a lightning strike on your roof, but I'd say you got lucky.
@marty00635 ай бұрын
@@laxminarayananks1520 that’s good to know thanks. Lightning strikes were never that close to our house when I was outside. I don’t believe our house ever got struck either despite having a metal roof. Many houses in town had them. But I did get lucky another time after we’d moved to another city. I was outside cleaning up birthday decorations that had been blown all over the place in a sudden unexpected storm when there was a loud boom and everything around me was yellow. I forgot about the cleaning and went inside very quickly. Another time there was a close lightning strike to our house and an electrical toy in my son’s room that we weren’t in at the moment started playing music. It’s never done that before. Someone has to push the buttons for it to start playing music. I’ve always wondered how the storm was able to cause that to happen.
@vlmellody515 ай бұрын
My fourth grade field trip encountered the first recorded tornado on Oah'u. This was in 1968.
@Abcdefu4205 ай бұрын
😮
@herisuryadi68854 ай бұрын
Hmm, was it truly a real tornado, or just something similar, like a landspout etc., also there seems to be no record of a tornado striking Oahu or Hawaii for that matter in 1968., or are you referring to a different area that is called Oahu
@vlmellody514 ай бұрын
@herisuryadi6885 I saw it slice a pickup truck and its driver in half lengthwise, so I don't much care what it was called. It looked like a tornado to me and, apparently, to the United States Air Force.
@avxy36322 ай бұрын
@@vlmellody51tf lol
@prehistoricorchid34555 ай бұрын
"Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas" Nebraska: "What am I chopped liver to you?" Seriously though, we get so many tornados, and I was always told we were part of the valley
@onyxdevil265 ай бұрын
shes way off all the maps have Ne in it
@prehistoricorchid34555 ай бұрын
@onyxdevil26 oh good, I'm not crazy 😭
@wintergray12214 ай бұрын
Definitely not Tornado Alley but Xenia, Ohio is cursed. I wouldn't live there if both Musk and Bezos gave me all their money to do it.
@GR-bn3xj4 ай бұрын
@@neko7606she is trying to get a climate change comment in. Dixie Alley has been getting bad tornados for decades. This isn't new.
@zigzagger943 ай бұрын
The Alley goes all the way to Illinois lol this take was weirdly reductive
@malloryutebay4135 ай бұрын
This was fascinating! I'm a self-proclaimed weather junkie - she explained everything so concisely and with such enthusiasm. Wired always knows where it's at with these experts 💯
@iricandescence5 ай бұрын
I'm a simple girl, I see Wired Tech Support and I click ❤️
@ericthompson39825 ай бұрын
Word.
@carlabarrick85385 ай бұрын
Exactly...click and learn more 😉
@its_lemon_1920 күн бұрын
Ever since I was a little girl, I wanted to be a meteorologist. Going to study it next year in college. (I'm 17) Can't believe I went back to the first thing I ever wanted to be. I hope 7 year old me is proud
@Jackkenway5 ай бұрын
To the thunder question at 18:38, when lightning strikes it heats the air to about 25 000 degrees Celsius or 45 000 degrees Fahrenheit, which is about 5x the temperature of the surface of the sun, so the air heats up and expands so quickly like she said and you hear that loud noise. P.S. Wrote this before watching the next part. lol
@bruderlein85145 ай бұрын
Storm chasers are heroes in my area. Y'all keep us alerted and safe. Thank you!!
@anonymes28845 ай бұрын
One of the best of these i've seen. Clear, informative and direct without being dry or humourless.
@gus4735 ай бұрын
Surprised she didn't mention ozone in answer to "can you smell rain?" That's common, measurable, and well documented! 😎✌️
@Bulldogg64045 ай бұрын
i was waiting to hear the word "petrichor" but it never happened. as a pluviophile, i feel the magic in that word.
@pynn10005 ай бұрын
Ozone is part of the mixed gases we smell when we "smell rain". The distinct smell was remarked by scientists in the late 1800s, Australian scientists used the term "Petrichor" for the bundle of smells in 1964. Ms Arnold mentioned rain + asphalt smells which is probably what most of us now smell most often.
@kimm65895 ай бұрын
meh, she got a couple things wrong, like the water answer as well. It's ok.
@snakedoktor60205 ай бұрын
@kimm6589 don't stop there. Tell us exactly what she got wrong. Personally, I would love to know.
@gus4735 ай бұрын
@@pynn1000 And Dr. A.J. Hagen-Smit used O³ in determining the processes of vehicle-smog formation in Southern California back in the day!
@CameronBrooks-rj1he5 ай бұрын
DVD-sized hale!? Wow. Fortunately it wasn’t CD sized
@oscarcacnio84185 ай бұрын
If it was 📼-sized, we'd be screwed.
@Ytviewer3215 ай бұрын
It's called a VC (video cassette) @@oscarcacnio8418
@davedixon21675 ай бұрын
@@oscarcacnio8418 Laserdisc!
@uncleFestr5 ай бұрын
I think they used DVD because my younger brother, who is 20 mind you, asked me what a CD was 😢
@Ziris855 ай бұрын
Hail that can store 4.7GB of data? Good thing it wasn't dual layer, or worse: Blu-ray!
@whisper43795 ай бұрын
I like that she’s wearing tornado earrings.
@justagirl45642 ай бұрын
Anyone here in 2024 hearing non stop about hurricane Milton? :(
@marigeobrien4 ай бұрын
I must tell this story here. When my son was about 3-1/2 years old, he explained the weather this way : "The world spins and it makes the wind. Then the wind pushes the clouds together until they pop and it rains." At the time I was so impressed that I couldn't even argue with him, though now I wish I had thought to quiz him further.
@derrickstorm69764 ай бұрын
Ahaha
@HistorysRaven5 ай бұрын
A small correction on the "smell of rain" answer: Yes, some of that smell is pollutants. But that's not all you're smelling. You're also smelling oils released by plants and bacteria in the soil. It's called petrichor.
@cleverusername93694 ай бұрын
A small correction: petrichor is specifically and importantly defined as the odor rain. If there's no rain, by definition there's no petrichor.
@avxy36322 ай бұрын
@@cleverusername9369A bit pedantic while not considering they were basically implying with rain...
@BTinsley19925 ай бұрын
Best 'Twisters' advertisement so far 🙌
@CamD92035 ай бұрын
6:12 that radar image is the 1999 Moore tornado, my family lost everything because of this tornado...
@Yoyoland-b5eАй бұрын
I'm so sorry this happened to you. That was a terrible tornado.
@IstasPumaNevada5 ай бұрын
Growing up, Twister was one of my favorite movies. :D Great video, great answers, great delivery and camera presence!
@pammy2195 ай бұрын
Cyrena is my favorite meteorologist! She's answered many of my (probably dumb) questions but always so informative and you can feel how much she loves to teach/talk about all weather and scientific aspects of it. I'm a Weather Weenie of hers, you should be too.
@brycejones71595 ай бұрын
Just to be clear, I wasn't asking that myths question, I was answering it LOL! I'm also a meteorologist and wrote that blog article to help explain the myths vs facts of weather. Thanks for the mention though that was cool LOL!
@SoupEaterExtraordinaire5 ай бұрын
A good example of the risk of using SEO terms in your posts lol
@veemacks72555 ай бұрын
Funny how they made it look like meteorologist Tomasz Schafernaker was asking them a question 🤣
@SassySapphireUK5 ай бұрын
Literally thought the same 😂
@DCS_World_Japan4 ай бұрын
The "lightning doesn't strike the same place twice" adage is so weird because it doesn't even require a meteorology degree to debunk. Lightning rods wouldn't function if it were true.
@yodaman80152 ай бұрын
its a saying not a fact
@marigeobrien4 ай бұрын
I can't smell rain or feel it but I can definitely feel the humidity rising. And it's not a good feeling at all.
@Stephen_Lafferty5 ай бұрын
8:27 - I did not expect to see Tomasz Schafernaker, BBC meteorologist extraordinare, namechecked on this episode!
@hodgeheg4804 ай бұрын
You’d think he’d already know this stuff. 😂
@k2000kidd14 ай бұрын
Once sheltered during an F3 in 1990 I heard a distinct growling into a dull roar, not the typical frieght train
@Evehjm5 ай бұрын
Can y’all do a part 2??? I could listen to her all day 👏🏼👏🏼
@temiudoh5 ай бұрын
2:14 “Scientifically, that’s kinda what happens” LMFAOOOOOO
@BenjamintheTortoise5 ай бұрын
This is such a great episode!! One of my favorites of this series overall!! Part 2 please ❤️😊
@Nurichiri5 ай бұрын
I've always been a bit of a weather nerd and for the last few years I've been a trained storm spotter. I could listen to her all day.
@elisabetablandin27445 ай бұрын
Omg!!!! It’s Cyrena!!!!! I was so happy to see her face on my “recommended videos” after being away on vacation for a week! She’s amazing!
@mikevaleriano95572 ай бұрын
I love all scientists, but I have a special place in my heart for people like her. I refuse to elaborate.
@avxy36322 ай бұрын
Lol...
@Crazyclay78YT2 ай бұрын
4:55 fully shut car windows are actually surprisingly strong. you could easily (with a glove) punch through a window that is open, but your hand will break first if the window is shut.
@timothyhouse1622Ай бұрын
How well do you think it will stop a 2x4 going a few hundred miles an hour?
@Crazyclay78YTАй бұрын
@timothyhouse1622 man I'm just saying, it's better to close them to keep them open for strength, obviously with enough force, anything will break.
@MardiloveytАй бұрын
She’s so well spoken and clear about her explanations. Excellent communication. Shes awesome.
@Pengy563 ай бұрын
1:45 is my favorite part. a lot of things that seem really easy, or very predictable, is because the experts who spend their entire lives studying certain fields KNOW what to look for or take into consideration what the average person wouldn't even think of or understand
@BruceBoyde5 ай бұрын
Hold up, tornadoes can cross rivers? Next you're going to tell me that they can cross thresholds uninvited and don't have to count grains of rice! Honestly, I'd never heard that myth. The mountainous terrain thing was definitely something I used to believe though.
@BIGBLOCK50220065 ай бұрын
Yep. The 1925 Tri-State tornado crossed the Mississippi River.
@caudleryan1235 ай бұрын
The 2019 Wetumpka, AL tornado that took out our house crossed the Coosa River and very nearly hit the hospital. We lived right next to the river.
@BruceBoyde5 ай бұрын
@@caudleryan123 I'm terribly sorry you had to experience that. Tornadoes scare me far more than the volcanoes I live near. But I wasn't being serious; of course they can cross rivers. I was making a joke about old vampire traditions. That being that they cannot cross running water and have an insatiable need to count things like grains of rice before proceeding with their business.
@Trahzy4 ай бұрын
@@BIGBLOCK5022006 The 1925 tri state tornado must have been a product of "climate change", based on her words.
@luise.perezv.87024 ай бұрын
Former swimmer here. I can confirm that it's protocol to get out of the water as soon as we see lightnings or hear thunders. We can continue swimming of it's just raining, but as soon as electrical activity begins, everybody's out of the water
@avxy36322 ай бұрын
Floridian with more common sense than others here, it's unbelievably common for people to casually continue swimming during thunderstorms here.
@NicholasCarranco5 ай бұрын
Please bring her back for another episode. I’m not into weather or storm chasing but this was so informative and entertaining. I loved it!
@joshuauriarte4525 ай бұрын
Great example of Tornadoes hitting mounine areas is Albuquerque NM 1985. It was a EF2 and caused 1 death. It his lousisiana and I40 area. Salt Lake city also had a Tornado which was also a EF2 this also caused 1 death and a lot of damage.
@rufinlooks69565 ай бұрын
Just had some insane storms last night that wrecked power for a ton of people so this is timely
@tcp30595 ай бұрын
"Tornadoes won't combine to form one super tornado" * Hesston, Kansas has entered the chat*
@Tpainisnotmyname5 ай бұрын
Thank you! I was just thinking, this happened not too long ago
@deucefoAM2065 ай бұрын
She said it's unlikely that two will combine, but that even if they do, their forces won't multiply to make a 'super tornado'. It's true that when two get close to each other, they usually cancel out.
@danbarnard97855 ай бұрын
Think she could've mentioned the Fujiwara Effect with this instance. Basically, the 2 cyclones will rotate around a common point before they either disperse, or the dominant core destroys the weaker core. When the dominant core removes the weaker core, it will be weaker itself but could re-intensify if conditions are right.
@tboneforreal5 ай бұрын
She was just dispelling what you always see in movies where two storms merge and create a super storm. In most cases two cyclones merging are more likely to disrupt each other, but in rare cases can become much stronger together.
@BorgAssimilator5 ай бұрын
Another thing worth noting in the trailer shown there about it; The Twin tornadoes did not combine in the movie, and the large tornado shown after that comment is a total different one on a different day. So there the trailer tricked us, lol.
@Lord_DargonАй бұрын
As a Floridian in tampa bay. Can confirm supercharged hurricane season.
@scedmonds6135 ай бұрын
The second question was phrased the exact way I would have asked it. Thank you for your service hero
@michaelmartin43455 ай бұрын
You did great, Cyrena!! Thank you for your incredible education ❤
@madmudd965 ай бұрын
Excuse me ma'am Missouri has been apart of Tornado Alley my whole 27 years... We even learned that in science class in elementary school...
@slayer187265 ай бұрын
Right, it never moved. Radars were just prioritized out there first. All the major outbreaks have happened outside "Tornado Alley"
@Trahzy4 ай бұрын
@@slayer18726Yup, Missouri is known for strong violent tornadoes.
@lueroso15405 ай бұрын
I can prove that tornadoes can go over rivers and mountains and last a while because it literally happened to me - search the June 1st, 2011 tornado in Massachusetts. It was our freakiest storm ever and one I'll never forget.
@mFxRampoo5 ай бұрын
I remember watching it on the news. The tornado literally formed right in front of the sky camera. It was pretty surreal.
@TheNN4 ай бұрын
"Tornadoes can cross water." Yes, because whoever came up with the myth that tornadoes can't cross water clearly was mixing up a tornado with a vampire.
@Daxter2505 ай бұрын
spot on and didn't waste time to answer each question. also very informative and educational! ...now i wanna have ma favorite show stormchasers again :/
@Spotdy3215 ай бұрын
There are tons of storm chasers including reed that livestream their chases here on KZbin. Not the same but still very interesting
@dxthehardyzway19975 ай бұрын
Literally just got tangentially into tornadoes/chasing within the past week or so and of course this pops up!
@COOLDUDEDB5 ай бұрын
this was a really good one and she spoke in such an engaging way! hope to see a sequel!
@LooseDeuce2 ай бұрын
9:14 man, AccuWeather truly living up to their name.
@heatherlewis99512 ай бұрын
This was awesome! Thanks! Love the tornado earrings too!
@JessicaLopez-wc4oh5 ай бұрын
Good timing! just had a derecho run through here last night
@ingridfrey67995 ай бұрын
The tornado earrings! Love.
@101urafail5 ай бұрын
This lady was inspirational. My favorite of the series so far
@Crazysurferdude5 ай бұрын
** _Has education in weather, still watched every second of this because I love weather_ **
@thebourgeoispunk5 ай бұрын
A simpler way to answer the question of how we predict weather is that we can track and measure what’s happening over a vast area of land and find patterns that allow us to build models that combine previously observed patterns with current conditions.
@GoddoDoggo5 ай бұрын
That's what she said.
@adamcapoferri69035 ай бұрын
Really nice! But also as a reminder, water is does not conduct electricity, you do, water just has a very low level of resistance aka electricity can move through it more freely.
@avxy36322 ай бұрын
Yes and no, while a conductor and a resistor are clearly stated as differing things, all or most materials are affected by strong enough electromagnetic forces, and to say that water just has a very low level of resistance basically means it, like many other things, can be subject to dielectric breakdown. I'm probably being a bit pedantic but it becomes a slippery slope with electricity. Water itself is not much of a conductor, but the ionic constituents make it so.
@timmclaughlin45905 ай бұрын
I love listening to competent people.
@JEBossTon925 ай бұрын
Excellent video and very informative. Well done! I’ll be on the lookout for her weather coverage!
@nextlayersecurity5 ай бұрын
this vid excellent. the explanation on partly-cloudy was AWESOME!!!
@StormChasingOfficialАй бұрын
Wow! This service is so good!
@naxonus2 ай бұрын
Wild watching this after Hurricane Helene and Milton lol
@bolzfieldUK14 ай бұрын
I could genuinely listen to this lady all day
@adyowls97445 ай бұрын
lol Tomasz Schafernaker wasn’t asking a question. He’s a meteorologist who works for the BBC in the UK sharing his video explaining the answer.
@Bulldogg64045 ай бұрын
this is relatively common practice for Wired interviews, taking posts that have a question _in them_ even if the original tweet has some answer already in it. it was a worthwhile question for one expert to pose to their audience, and unsurprisingly it is going to be worthwhile for other experts to pose to other audiences.
@ROLtheWolf5 ай бұрын
The window thing: it wasn't about windows breaking. It was about the low pressure, and it the house is sealed tight, then the walls will bulge out and the roof will pop off.
@rdfox765 ай бұрын
Which is still wrong, because the windows are the weakest part of the structure and would break long before the roof pops off. Not that it matters; houses have enough natural leaks that they can equalize the pressure on their own. If they can't, then the windows will break and equalize it. And if that's not enough, then the pickup truck flying through your wall to land on the couch will make a big enough hole to solve the problem. Don't waste time dinking with windows, just seek shelter.
@melissalynn59495 ай бұрын
LOVED this episode! Bring her back for round 2!
@PattonScr5 ай бұрын
A wonderful expert and a lot of fascinating info! thank you!
@Maazzzo5 ай бұрын
I'm not even that interested in weather and still found this really interesting. Thanks!
@srtcsb5 ай бұрын
Really good explanations. Learned a lot in a short video. 😎👍
@Ziris855 ай бұрын
Today our local meteorologist taught us about positive and negative lightning. We had a few positive lightning strikes last night and those suckers were LOUD
@Neotheaterr4 ай бұрын
And positive lightning is a lot more violent and dangerous. Watch out
@avxy36322 ай бұрын
@@Neotheaterrand lightning is big boom 💥 who knew? lol
@12thDecember5 ай бұрын
Fascinating. Thank you!
@peggytrummell36065 ай бұрын
Just saw the movie. Really liked it. Started a bit slow, but got better as it went. Some of the things they did, I don’t believe are possible at this time. For example, triangulating a tornado that is constantly moving and changing. The movie (and the previous movie) made it seem like you see tornados every time you chase.
@kosjeyr5 ай бұрын
Tornado Alley actually has 3 different areas based upon what month it is. Overall with them: it's basically Texas to the Dakots (north and south) with Nebraska to Indiana (east and west.) How do I know? The strongest August F5 Tornado in the country happened a week after I was born. The Plainfield Tornado of 28 August 1990 with winds estimated up to 320 mph but usually said between 305 and 310 based on what source you go to. The cloud that spun it went directly over me in Aurora, Illinois. I will never go by the Enhanced Fujita Scale.
@brookiiecookie1995 ай бұрын
Wow. Every single point is wrong, yikes
@kosjeyr5 ай бұрын
@brookiiecookie199 try to break it down then? I bet you didn't live in Aurora, Illinois in August of 1990.
@mick62472 ай бұрын
Yeah this is wrong. Only thing I can agree is the ef scale is wrong.I’m sorry just cause you were a newborn during a tornado doesn’t mean yk science I lived through 2 different ef5s my family 3 but I’m not over here saying that means ik everything😭😭 Anyways no tornado alley doesn’t go into the dakotas. Other places then tornado alley have tornados just not as common. The only one your right about is Nebraska is apart of the alley , but Indiana ain’t, if anything their Dixie alley. Also I’m sorry but the strongest ef5 wasn’t even the Plainfield tornado, Plainfield had 321 mph ,it was the Moore bridge creek Oklahoma tornado with 324 mph winds, strongest winds recorded , ever Plainfield was only the strongest in that state . And the Moore bridge creek only had the strongest winds the strongest was the tri state tornado. (Also I found it funny “have you lived through 1999” you said you were a week old? You didn’t even remember the tornado, as another ef5 survivor , no other survivor thinks this way your on your ownnn😭😭)
@maniman-human2274 ай бұрын
I've filled a metal cylinder with GoPros and named it "Dorothy", I'll be driving my truck directly into a tornado in order to learn more about them.
@herisuryadi68854 ай бұрын
Heh nice
@CherokeeBird5 ай бұрын
My dad told me that when he was a teen, he and his friends would try chasing tornadoes. Apparently that was an Oklahoma past time back in the day lol
@bin4ry_d3struct0r5 ай бұрын
Water is actually a very poor conductor of electricity. It's the salt particles in the water that serve as the conductor.
@timz98625 ай бұрын
So, basically, you don't want to be sitting in the middle of a salt quarry, then?
@bin4ry_d3struct0r5 ай бұрын
@@timz9862 The salt needs to be in an aqueous state to conduct electricity (that's where the role of the water comes in), so you don't want to be in the middle of a salt quarry during a rainstorm.
@avxy36322 ай бұрын
@@bin4ry_d3struct0r Yeah, it disperses quite rapidly even in the ocean, makes sense it'll only reach into what it's got, really any ionic constituents.
@rfvtgbzhn5 ай бұрын
2:18 the rotation of tornados and winds in gemeral is actually caused by the earth's rotation around it's own axis.
@raeperonneau49415 ай бұрын
I had no idea that there was a formula for the weather descriptions. Learn something new… Thank you.
@thelostone69815 ай бұрын
So many of these questions had indignation and ignorance and it hurt my heart.
@bab0275 ай бұрын
She’s so smart I can just listen to her for days.
@MasterHokageGamer2 ай бұрын
10:24 She's perfectly correct. 😮
@spacemanspiff63323 ай бұрын
I've watched plenty of secondary vortices around main tornadoes. Eventually they become assimilated. I dont believe it makes the main vortex stronger, but they do spawn nearby and merge regularly.
@BeeWhistler4 ай бұрын
I don’t mind that meteorologists can’t predict weather very far ahead. I mind that so many apps and news organizations pretend that they can. I have learned to take the long-range forecast as an expected trend that may change tomorrow. But they never seem to include a disclaimer right up front about the data they offer us.
@MKPiatkowski5 ай бұрын
This was incredibly helpful. Thanks!
@benwagner50895 ай бұрын
So the leather belts would break under tension due to the high winds, or would the people lashed into them just be shish-ka-bobbed by the debris? I can understand the debris at least.
@haley_th5 ай бұрын
When I was 13 or 14 I came very very close to being hit by lightning. I was about to start a summer job helping out the janitors in the building my dad worked at. This building was at the top of a hill and had a large patio/paved area around it. While the property manager was showing me around outside, we both pause and things just felt quiet and weird. Then my vision gets completely filled with white light that was pinkish at the edges for a fraction of a second and it was gone. The manager and I looked at each other and then just kept on. I didn’t realize until years later what had happened.
@AlexLaughlin-b4l2 ай бұрын
tornado alley also includes Nebraska and Iowa, not just kansas, oklahoma and texas
@TooShaye5 ай бұрын
I LOVE her Jamba Juice earrings! So jealous
@sequelster5 ай бұрын
Okay this was funny lol
@terryl78745 ай бұрын
Weather forecast is so difficult and especially tornado prediction! My best weather prediction is a device that measures air pressure i.e barometer. Never fails.
@sociopathmercenary5 ай бұрын
I use AccuWeather... Sometimes wrong. 😂
@xxfloppypillowxx5 ай бұрын
Jesus christ I was not ready for that thunder sound effect jump scare