Invisible Tropical Waves Linked to India's Extreme Rainfall: New Study
A new study by Indian, UK and French scientists finds that invisible tropical atmospheric waves strongly increase extreme rainfall along India's west coast, with Rossby waves raising it 20 to 60 percent. Tracking these waves could give forecasters days of extra warning before floods and landslides.
A new study by Indian researchers, working with scientists from the United Kingdom and France, has found a strong link between certain invisible atmospheric disturbances and extreme rainfall along India's west coast. These disturbances are called tropical atmospheric waves - large, slow-moving ripples in the atmosphere that travel through the tropics and influence where and how heavy rain forms. The work was carried out at an atmospheric radar research centre at a university in Kerala and published in a peer-reviewed science journal.
The study focused on three kinds of waves, named Kelvin, Rossby and Mixed Rossby-Gravity waves. The researchers found that these waves boost heavy rainfall by organising tall rain clouds and pulling more moisture together over the Arabian Sea and the Western Ghats (the mountain range running along India's west coast). Among them, Rossby waves had the strongest effect, increasing extreme rainfall over land by 20 to 60 percent. This is described as the first thorough study of how such tropical waves shape rainfall extremes in this region.
The findings matter most for Kerala, which has suffered repeated floods and landslides in recent years. The study noted that the devastating rains of 2018 and 2019 came with strong Rossby wave activity, while the deadly 2024 Wayanad landslides, which killed around 300 people, coincided with intense Kelvin wave activity. Linking these disasters to wave patterns gives scientists a clearer picture of why some rainfall events turn catastrophic.
The most useful outcome is for early-warning systems. Unlike sudden local thunderstorms, which are very hard to predict, tropical wave activity can often be tracked several days in advance. If weather-forecasting models start watching these wave signals, forecasters could get extra lead time to warn people before heavy rain hits, reducing disaster risk in vulnerable coastal areas. This becomes more important as a warming ocean intensifies the water cycle and makes extreme rain more likely. The project was backed by India's Ministry of Earth Sciences.
For exam aspirants, this story touches atmospheric science, the monsoon and Western Ghats geography, disaster management and early-warning systems, and the role of government science agencies, useful across science, geography and environment sections.
Key Points to Remember
- Tropical atmospheric waves are large, slow ripples in the atmosphere that influence where heavy rain forms in the tropics.
- The study examined Kelvin, Rossby and Mixed Rossby-Gravity waves and their effect on rainfall over the Arabian Sea and Western Ghats.
- Rossby waves had the biggest impact, raising extreme rainfall over land by 20 to 60 percent.
- Kerala's 2018-2019 floods were linked to Rossby waves; the 2024 Wayanad landslides coincided with strong Kelvin wave activity.
- Because these waves can be tracked days ahead, including them in forecast models could improve early-warning systems.
- The research was supported by India's Ministry of Earth Sciences.
Exam Relevance
Combines atmospheric science, Western Ghats geography and disaster early-warning systems, relevant for science, geography and environment questions.
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