210 mph
The fastest wind speed ever recorded on earth was 302 mph. It was measured in an F5 tornado in the Oklahoma City area on May 3, 1999.
the fastest winds recorded in a hurricane were 190 mph in Hurricane Camille.
the wind speed was very fast to fast for scientists
Ceres, which is not truly a planet, has no atmosphere and therefore no wind.
The fastest winds on Earth are found in tornadoes.
The fastest wind speed ever recorded on earth was 302 mph. It was measured in an F5 tornado in the Oklahoma City area on May 3, 1999.
the fastest winds recorded in a hurricane were 190 mph in Hurricane Camille.
The fastest wind speed ever recorded anywhere was 302 mph (486 km/h) in an F5 tornado as it tore through Bridge Creek, Oklahoma on May 3, 1999. The measurement was obtained with Doppler radar, so it technically was not a direct measurement. The fastest directly recorded wind speed was a gust to 253 mph (408 km/h) recorded on Barrow Island, Australia on April 10, 1996.
What is the average wind speed of the Tundra?
No. The fastest speed a tornado has peen known to travel is 73 mph, about 1/10 the speed of sound. The fastest wind speed ever recorded in a tornado was 302 mph, still less than half the speed of sound.
The fastest wind speed ever recorded outside a tornado was a gust to 253 mph in Cyclone Olivia as it struck Barrow Island off the coast of Australia on April 10, 1996.
On May 03, 1999, a series of tornadoes hit the suburbs of Oklahoma City. Now, this is not that unusual for Oklahoma except that one of the tornadoes resulted in a recorded wind speed of 318 MPH or 509 KM/H, the world's fastest tornado ever recorded.
Neptune has serious weather, far more dangerous than the second fastest wind storm known in the solar system, Jupiter, recorded as a wind speed of 374 mph.
The fastest wind ever recorded on earth was 302 mph +/- 20. A DOW (Doppler On Wheels) recorded this wind in an F5 tornado near Moore, Oklahoma on May 3, 1999.
253 MPH on Barrow Island, Australia. It was during the passage of tropical cyclone Olivia on April 10, 1996.
the wind speed was very fast to fast for scientists
The fastest wind on earth occur in tornadoes, which have been known to have wind speeds in excess of 300 mph (480 km/h), far faster than anything a hurricane can produce.