THUNDER STORM SEASON
Atlast
its going to be the start of Thunder Storm Season / Mango Showers in India.Tamil Nadu - A
Special write-up from Tamil Nadu
Weatherman.
Mango showers in Tamil Nadu pick up in interior and
southern Tamil Nadu:-
Its
really interesting. The Pre-monsoon season or Hot weather or Summer season is
the names you would have heared it in your text books for the period of March
to end of May month. The temperatures, particularly the maximum, during this
season are very high over most parts of the country especially over central and
northwest India. In Tamil Nadu, our IMD Chennai will start the thunderstorm
reports from March 15th every year. This year there was no rains till now. But slowly the rains have picked up Kanyakumari
got very good spell yesterday. Salem, Kanyakumari, Tirunelveli,
Dharmapuri, Tiruppur, Erode, Madurai,
Virudhungar, coimbatore, Theni, Nilgiris, Dindigul, Krishnagiri, Vellore,
Tiruvannamalai, Villupuram, Trichy, Perambalur. South Coastal regions from Vedaranyam,
Tiruvarur, Pudukottai, Ramanthapuram will also get ains atleast for 2 days in
the next 10 days. Only area to miss rains will be Chennai belt.
For
Tamil Translation courtesy Tamil Hindu please visit https://tamil.thehindu.com/tamilnadu/article26864232.ece
Rainfall
Kanyakumari district ending 8.30 am on 17.04.2019 are as follows
Kuzhithurai
- 54 mm. Kinnimar: 42mm. Suralode: 30mm.
Puthan
Dam - 54 mm. Neyoor: 41mm. Eraniel: 15mm.
Perunchani
- 53 mm. Chittar I: 35mm. Colachel: 11mm.
Pechiparai
- 53 mm. Boothapandy: 35mm
Theat and the wind discontinuity as you all know, its the period when
the easterlies starts to weaken and then the collusion of winds with the
westerlies happen creating Line of wind discontinuity and coupled with heat,
its prime season for Thunderstorms. Remember mostly interior Tamil Nadu and
South Tamil Nadu benefit from rains. Coastal Tamil Nadu rarely gets rains
unless there is a Low Pressure or Depression or Cyclone in Bay of Bengal or
Arabian Sea.
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There many interesting events that happen during this sizzling season
(Mid March till end of May before monsoon sets in) and this does often come up
in your text books. Here are the names you need to know in different parts of
India. This is also one of my favorite seasons to track weather and most
unpredictable season too.
1) Mango Showers in Kerala, Karnataka Tamil Nadu
Mango shower occurs along Kerala,
Karnataka and also in parts of Tamil Nadu. The showers prevent the mangoes from dropping prematurely from trees and are
crucial for the mango cultivation in South India. It is mostly caused by
an Line of Wind Discontinuity (LWD). During April-May, the wind direction is in
transformation stage to westerlies this will result in the wind from Easterlies
to meet the westerlies. This causes trough / LWD across large areas in
peninsular India. Massive thunderstorms develop and thus causing thunderous
rains. Some places record 100 mm rainfall with ease. Hailstorm (Alangankatti
mazhai are associated during this period. In Tamil Nadu, Interior and southern
regions get rains during this period.
2) Cherry Blossom’ or
‘Coffee showers’ in Karnataka
It is a local wind that blows over the interior Karnataka (Kodagu,
Chikmagalur and Hassan in Karnataka) during the hot weather season and is
extremely helpful for coffee cultivation. Its mostly due to the katabatic wind
which blows down the slope toward the valley and when it interacts with the
easterlies and causes unstability. The Hill slopes in the interior Karnataka
gets most of these rains.
3) Kali Andhi
Hope
you all remember last year Andhi that killed many people https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_Indian_dust_storms
in the north India. Puzhuthi puyal. It is just like our Veppa Salanam rains in Tamil Nadu
one difference is that it will a gust front filled with sand and then followed
by rains with thunder and lightening. Convective dust-storms occur over
northwest India during the premonsoon season (March - May). The dust is raised
by the down-draft of a thunderstorm cloud (cumulonimbus) or a squall line.
'Andhi' is the local (Indian) name for the convective type of dust-storm, a
name possibly given because of the darkness created by the dust-wall as it
passes. The distance between the cumulonimbus cloud and the associated Andhi
dust-wall on the ground can be as large as 30 Km. The dust raised by strong
wind reduces horizontal visibility to less than 100 meters. It may quickly
build up out of the blue, transforming the dry hot afternoon into a dark brown
mush. The assault of the Andhi usually lasts only a few minutes. North India
including Delhi often get affected by these Kali Andhi every year. They are
also called as black storms.
Rajasthan Andhi - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQUjgNYTN5s
4) Loo winds, North-western,
India
The
Loo mainly originates in the large desert regions of the northwestern Indian
subcontinent: the Great Indian Desert, the Cholistan Desert and the desert
areas of Southern Balochistan. The plains of North India and Pakistan are both
very hot and extremely dry during this season, water evaporates quite readily.
Loo direction is from west to east and they are usually experienced in the
afternoons and its temperature varies between 45°C to 50°C. Entire North and
north west India gets affected by Loo. It makes life miserable for the people
and the heat wave takes its toll and many people die because of it.
Kalbaishakhi, West Bengal,
India
It is a other name of Norwestor in West Bengal.
Moisture inflow from bay of bengal coupled with the heating of air, cold
advection at 500 hpa and and presence of a jet stream between the levels 300 mb
and 200 mb are extremely helpful for the occurrence of nor’westers. They
normally form over Jharkhand and Bihar and travel entire East India affecting
Odisha, West Bengal, Bangladesh. The dooars in West Bengal gets worst hit. Buxa
Duar gets close to 900 mm rainfall during the Norwestor season. If you track
the radar u can spot derechos and most of the Tornados in India form in this
period.
Tornado
in Odisha in 2009 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Caq08IAhNP0
Bordoichila, Assam
-------------------------
It
is a other name of Norwestor in Assam. The local severe storms of Assam and North East India
during the pre-monsoon season are termed as Bordoichila, meaning the angry
daughter of Assam. Advection of warm air in the lower levels and cold
air in the upper levels increases the conditional instability in the atmosphere
and favor the outbreak of severe thunderstorms.
The southerlies approaching the north–east
India, originate from the Bay of Bengal and thus, are warm and moist On the
contrary, the westerlies originating from the Tibetan plateau and eastern
Himalaya are cold and dry. In night time the Garo, Khasi and Jaintia hills cool
down more rapidly than the plains, the katabatic wind blows down the slope
toward the valley. This, in turn, brings down the moist air to the valley and a
front-like structure develops during the nighttime, having two different types
of air masses on—either side and this causes severe thunderstorms to occur over
the valley mostly during the nightime. North Eastern states mostly, Assam,
Meghalaya Tirupura gets affected by these storms.
You
should also know how dangerous these thunderstorms can be, due to high energy
they get because of heat, it kills more people than Cyclones in India every
year.
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RememberRemember my post on Lightning and Thunderstorms and 20 things
one should know, when they are caught in Thunderstorms accompanied with gusts,
high intensity rains and Lightning. Those who have missed it can see it here -
https://www.facebook.com/tamilnaduweatherman/photos/a.1611217492438862.1073741828.1471936623033617/2196711977222741/
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