New Delhi, Updated on Nov 3, 2022 10:42 IST

The study indicates that the cyclone movement through the atmosphere continuously scavenges the existing vapour over the vortex cross-section much like a moving suction pump. 

Scientists from Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kharagpur and Institute of Earth Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taiwan, have reached a mechanism to trace the source that supplies moisture to severe cyclonic storms. The study indicates that the cyclone movement through the atmosphere continuously scavenges the existing vapour over the vortex cross-section much like a moving suction pump and provides the first experimental evidence of a theoretical model, an IIT Kharagpur statement said on Wednesday quoting Professor Anindya Sarkar from the Department of Geology. 

โ€œClimate change due to global warming projects that the frequency of category 4 and 5 storms (60 to >70 m per second sustained wind speed) will be doubled by the end of the 21st century. We studied four such recent severe storms โ€“ Nepartak, Meranti, Malakas and Megi -- of category 4/5 โ€“ which had devastated Taiwan in 2016,โ€ he was quoted as saying. 

Scientists study how rains were scavenged by moving cyclones  

The statement quoted a former visiting professor at IIT Kharagpur and the lead author of the paper Sourendra Bhattacharya as having said, โ€œThe cyclone during its journey keeps shedding enormous amount of rain which causes a progressive reduction in the ratio of the isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen in the leftover vapour mass. We tracked this magnitude of reduction, calculated and modelled to see how much rains were scavenged by these moving cyclones.โ€ 

The statement quoting Prof Mao-Chang Liang of Academia Sinica said, โ€œWe placed a mass spectrometer on top of a tall building to continuously measure the isotopes of oxygen and hydrogen in the vapour as these typhoons approached Taiwan. This technique provided us real-time variation inside typhoons every 10 minutes as it was raining and vapour compositions changed.โ€ โ€œSince both cyclone frequency and intensities are rising due to the ongoing climate change, this observation will be very important while studying the tropical cyclones that recurrently hit both India and Taiwan/Japan region. It also opened up avenues for future collaboration between the two countries,โ€ Liang said. 

Many houses were damaged and several casualties were reported in Bangladesh as โ€˜Cycle Sitrangโ€™ battered coastal districts of the country on October 25, 2022, as the most recent instance of cyclone damage. 

Model can help analyse cyclones that hit coastal belts 

An IIT Kharagpur spokesperson said with the help of the model the cyclones that lash the coastal belts of the region every year can be analysed, including the factors behind the intensity of cyclonic winds and rains. 
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