Cơ bản
Giao ngay
Giao dịch tiền điện tử một cách tự do
Giao dịch ký quỹ
Tăng lợi nhuận của bạn với đòn bẩy
Chuyển đổi và Đầu tư định kỳ
0 Fees
Giao dịch bất kể khối lượng không mất phí không trượt giá
ETF
Sản phẩm ETF có thuộc tính đòn bẩy giao dịch giao ngay không cần vay không cháy tải khoản
Giao dịch trước giờ mở cửa
Giao dịch token mới trước niêm yết
Futures
Truy cập hàng trăm hợp đồng vĩnh cửu
TradFi
Vàng
Một nền tảng cho tài sản truyền thống
Quyền chọn
Hot
Giao dịch với các quyền chọn kiểu Châu Âu
Tài khoản hợp nhất
Tối đa hóa hiệu quả sử dụng vốn của bạn
Giao dịch demo
Giới thiệu về Giao dịch hợp đồng tương lai
Nắm vững kỹ năng giao dịch hợp đồng từ đầu
Sự kiện tương lai
Tham gia sự kiện để nhận phần thưởng
Giao dịch demo
Sử dụng tiền ảo để trải nghiệm giao dịch không rủi ro
Launch
CandyDrop
Sưu tập kẹo để kiếm airdrop
Launchpool
Thế chấp nhanh, kiếm token mới tiềm năng
HODLer Airdrop
Nắm giữ GT và nhận được airdrop lớn miễn phí
Launchpad
Đăng ký sớm dự án token lớn tiếp theo
Điểm Alpha
Giao dịch trên chuỗi và nhận airdrop
Điểm Futures
Kiếm điểm futures và nhận phần thưởng airdrop
Đầu tư
Simple Earn
Kiếm lãi từ các token nhàn rỗi
Đầu tư tự động
Đầu tư tự động một cách thường xuyên.
Sản phẩm tiền kép
Kiếm lợi nhuận từ biến động thị trường
Soft Staking
Kiếm phần thưởng với staking linh hoạt
Vay Crypto
0 Fees
Thế chấp một loại tiền điện tử để vay một loại khác
Trung tâm cho vay
Trung tâm cho vay một cửa
Can You Survive Inside A Tornado? This Scientist Did By Accident He's Lucky To Be Alive
(MENAFN- The Conversation) Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to …
I have seen the center of a monster. Most people describe the sound of a tornado as like a freight train, but up close, it’s more like a thousand screaming jet engines. I am one of the few people on Earth who has driven into a tornado and lived to tell the tale.
While it might sound like a scene from a Hollywood blockbuster involving a high-tech armored truck, my experience was much more dangerous and terrifying.
I am an atmospheric scientist who studies tornadoes, but I am only alive today because of split-second decisions and a massive amount of dumb luck. Believe me, I do not want to ever be in that situation again.
The day the sky broke
It started in northwest Kansas, where I was studying supercell thunderstorms – the kind that produce tornadoes – with a team of students from the University of Michigan.
We were positioned under a thunderstorm that was so dark, we had to turn on our vehicles’ headlights in the middle of the day. Suddenly, a tornado formed and began charging directly toward us.
The students were in other vehicles and got away, but my car was quickly swallowed by a cloud of flying debris so thick that I couldn’t even see my own hood.
With my options disappearing, I made a desperate move: I turned the car directly into the wind, hoping the vehicle’s aerodynamics would keep us pinned to the ground rather than being flipped like a toy.
The physics of fear
When you’re inside a tornado’s vortex, your body experiences things the news cameras can’t capture:
** The pressure change**: A tornado is a localized area of rapidly changing pressure. Your ears don’t just“pop” – they ache, as if your head is being squeezed by giant hands.
** The solid wind**: We measured wind speeds of almost 150 mph (241 kph) nearby, but inside the vortex, they were likely much higher. At those speeds, air hits you with the force of a solid object.
** The soup of darkness**: In movies, the“eye” is a clear space. In reality, it’s a debris ball – a brownish-black soup of pulverized soil, trees and buildings. It was so dark that my camera couldn’t even register a picture.
As debris slammed into my windshield, I was terrified I’d be crushed by flying materials – tornadoes can pick up fences, wood and metal from buildings, tree branches, even cows. Textbook advice says to get into a ditch so you’re lying flat and might be more protected from flying debris. But the wind was so violent, I couldn’t even open the car door. I just stayed low and prayed.
The making of a monster
How does this severe of a storm even happen? It takes a perfect, violent recipe of atmospheric ingredients:
** Fuel**: A tornado needs warm, muggy air (water vapor) near the ground with dry air above it. This creates the potential for rising air, but only if the atmosphere is unstable enough to overcome“the cap.”
** The cap**: A thin“inversion” layer of stable air acts like a lid on that warm moist air, bottling it up until the moist air punches through.
** The dry line**: The dry line is where warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico and dry air from the west meet. The advancing hot, dry air is actually heavier than muggy air, and this dry air pushes the moist air upward, disrupting the cap.
** Wind shear**: Surface winds from the south and upper winds from the west create a horizontal rolling motion in the atmosphere. When the air is pushed upward, that rotation becomes vertical, creating what’s known as a mesocyclone.
** The jet stream**: About 5 to 7 miles (8 to 11 kilometers) up, the jet stream is a fast-moving river of air. Disturbances within it can create areas that pull air upward from below and lower surface pressure.
Together, these ingredients can create the powerful, rotating vortex that you know as a tornado.
These storms can have winds up to 300 mph (482 kph) and leave a long path of destruction, sometimes more than a mile (1.6 kilometers) wide. They can stay on the ground for seconds or many minutes, tearing apart buildings and trees in their path. Where they will travel is hard to predict, so getting to safety should be a priority.
The monster’s lesson
When the storm passed, the silence was jarring. My rental car was mired in mud, the antenna was bent in half, and bits of straw were embedded in every single seam of the car’s body.
Tornadoes are extremely dangerous. Sixty-one people were killed by tornadoes in the U.S. in 2025, and many more were injured by flying debris. Make sure you know what to do when a tornado alert sounds – follow the alert’s advice and get to safety immediately.
When scientists chase storms, they are not trying to experience tornadoes – they are trying to measure the small-scale processes inside storms that cannot be observed in other ways. Many of the key processes that produce tornadoes occur within a few hundred meters of the ground and evolve over minutes, which means radars, satellites and weather stations often miss them.
Seeing a tornado and the damage it causes is a powerful reminder that people are not in control of everything. It serves as a warning to be wise and ready for anything. Sophisticated research using drones and radar is the smart way to study these monsters – seeing them from the inside is definitely not.
Willa Connolly, a student at Tappan Middle School in Ann Arbor, Michigan, contributed to this article.
MENAFN23032026000199003603ID1110894987