Multi-decade data may help predict how violent storms will affect India

Press Trust of India  |  Washington 

Scientists have mapped the moisture and temperature variations in over five decades using satellite data, creating a resource that may be a critical for improving predictions of how violent storms will affect any area.

Better predictions of when, where and how much rain will fall is key to saving property and lives, researchers said in a statement.

The team, including those from and National Institute of Technology Rourkela, in collaboration with the developed multi-decade moisture and temperature fields using variety of surface and

They have shown that fine-scale data, never before available for India's monsoon regions, is a critical ingredient to understanding and improving predictions of how violent storms will behave over land.

Just as storms change behaviour based on the landscape -- such as moving from water to land -- or from encountering a cold or warm front, they also react to changes in wet or dry and warm versus colder soils.

"For a long time Indian monsoon research has focused as an oceanic feedback, but in recent years we have seen localized heavy rain embedded within thunderstorm events with flooding and cloud bursts that occur over land," said Dev Niyogi, a at in the US.

"What we have learned is that gradients in soil moisture and soil temperature help create an atmospheric frontal boundary and can unleash violent reactions from a storm," said Niyogi, who led the study published in the journal Scientific Data.

"Understanding these locations climatologically is therefore quite important to help these predictions," he said.

Researchers worked more than three years to compile different datasets and assimilate global and soil temperature data from 1981-2017 and beyond.

Their product now provides gridded data every three hours for every 4 kilometre parcel of land giving soil moisture and temperature in

Combined with observed during that period, the data can improve models used to predict future storms.

"This data is useful for a host of applications, including to help make decisions about where to grow crops or places in which we can adapt to prevent flooding or erosion," Niyogi said.

Niyogi added that the data collection was possible because of the investment has made through its and the partnership Purdue has created with the and scientists.

"Working together, between Purdue and the Indian teams, as well as the support we got on both sides, we could create a product that has been desired for a number of decades now," Niyogi said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, February 24 2019. 16:15 IST