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Why do tornadoes spin?

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Answer: Wind shear creates rotation

Earth's rotation makes them spinWrong. Earth's rotation (Coriolis effect) affects large systems like hurricanes but is too weak to create tornadoes. Tornado spin comes from wind shear - winds at different heights moving in different directions.

Wind shear creates rotationCorrect! Tornadoes form when winds at different heights blow in different directions or speeds (wind shear). This creates a horizontal spinning effect. When a powerful thunderstorm updraft tilts this rotation vertical and tightens it, a tornado forms. As the spinning column narrows (conservation of angular momentum), it spins faster - like a figure skater pulling in their arms!

Lightning creates spinning airWrong. Lightning is an electrical discharge and doesn't create spinning air. Tornado rotation comes from wind shear - different wind speeds at different heights creating rotation that gets tilted and tightened by updrafts.

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