Heavenly Dog Wind Technique

A technique in which the user uses their mastery of the Wind Release to increase the speed with which atmospheric molecules vibrate and decrease the attractive force between them, in effect raising its temperature. Moisture from the surrounding area is then condensed and used to increase the humidity of the pocket of heated air. At the same time, the reverse occurs for another mass of air; chakra is used to slow the vibrations of its molecules, and furthermore acts as a dehydrating agent. The heated, humidified portion of atmospheric gas is then allowed to interact with the cooler, dehumidified portion of atmospheric gas, the result of such interaction being the rising of the warmer mass of air, thus producing a rotary effect. As the elapsed time for the induced rotation increases, the rapidity of this rotation increases by an order of magnitude. The violently revolving mass of air is then molded into the likeness of the Tengu from Japanese mythology, and smites its target with the sheer destructive power and fury of nature itself. The chakra expenditure of this technique is grossly disproportionate to the resultant destructive power that it unleashes. This is due to the fact that it takes negligible quantities of energy to heat and cool the respective masses of air, in comparison to the revolutionary force that are produced by the interaction of those said masses. The technique has been likened to the ire of a woman; easy to invoke, difficult to withstand and nigh on impossible to placate. When used by Kagari, the Heavenly Dog Wind Technique gives new meaning to the idiom, "Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned."

Trivia

 * The means by which this technique is formed are much the same as the means by which tornadoes, real life weather phenomena, are formed.
 * Tengukaze is a Japanese word used to refer to a strong, sudden wind. It literally means "Heavenly Dog Wind", an allusion to the long-nosed demons, the Tengu, of traditional folklore.