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Orographic effect and multiscale interactions during an extreme rainfall event
Author(s) -
Himadri Baisya,
Sandeep Pattnaik
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
environmental research communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2515-7620
DOI - 10.1088/2515-7620/ab2417
Subject(s) - orography , orographic lift , climatology , moisture , environmental science , advection , monsoon , precipitation , atmospheric sciences , meteorology , geology , geography , physics , thermodynamics
Interaction of multiple oscillations of different time scales may result in severe weather events. The presence of orography can modulate the intensity of these events even further. Kerala witnessed one such heavy rainfall event in August, 2018, claiming 483 lives and damages worth INR 200 billion. This study focuses on the peak rainfall duration (13–17 August) when the departure from normal was 42%. Segregating moisture transport into its mean and perturbation terms show that an anomalous moisture channel over the Arabian Sea supplied continuous moisture to the Western Ghats (WG), whereas anomalous wind due to a monsoon depression advected moisture towards the southern peninsula. It is evident in the form of Moisture Flux Convergence (MFC) towers traversing along the Eastern Ghats before merging with the semi-permanent MFC feature over the WG. The presence of positive quasi bi-weekly oscillations and of Intra Seasonal Oscillations (ISO) aggravated the event as they complemented the anomalous moisture transport, with ISO constantly providing winds of the order of 2–3 ms −1 . In addition, shedding of MFC towers by the depression is accredited to the synoptic scale oscillation.

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