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Spiralling force
C. RANGANATHAN
Cyclones, hurricanes and typhoons, differing only in name,
transfer energies equal to several megaton nuclear bombs from the
ocean to the atmosphere every year. Nearly 70 to 90 cyclonic
systems develop all over the globe every year.
The "Coriolis force" or the "deflecting force" caused by the
rotation of the earth about its own axis is maximum at poles and
progressively decreases to zero at the equator. It is this force
that compels the surface winds to spiral towards the "low
pressure system". As "Coriolis force" is negligible in the
equator-belt between Lat 50 N and Lat 50 S, cyclonic systems do
not develop in this region. Tropical cyclones weaken into a
depression on reaching Lat 400 N (beyond Tokyo Lat) in the
northern hemisphere and Lat 300 S (beyond Mauritius Lat) in the
southern hemisphere as the sea-surface temperature drops to 250
C.
Cyclonic systems do not develop or intensify all of a sudden. A
day passes for the intensification of a system from one category
to a higher category.
Radars and geo-stationary satellites have shown that cyclonic
systems move zig-zag like a snake and take loop turns when
"steering winds" aloft (30,000 and above) dictate such movements.
In 1996, a cyclone heading towards Bangladesh took a loop-turn to
head towards Andhra coast and became a severe cyclonic storm.
Close to the Andhra coast, it took a second loop-turn to move
towards Tamilnadu coast and finally dissipated close to
Pondicherry. The same year another severe cyclone heading towards
Saurashtra coast took a loop-turn and dissipated in the Arabian
sea itself. It is at such times cyclone warnings go completely
wrong.
Marginal cyclones do more good than harm in the form of heavy
rains that are badly needed for the sustenance of life. But there
is no way to either weaken a disastrous cyclone or change its
course.
Doubts are often raised whether the intensity of a disastrous
cyclone could be reduced by artificial means. The advances in
science and technology notwithstanding taming of cyclone appears
a bizarre possibility even in distant future.
In America attempts were made to weaken hurricanes by seeding the
rain-bearing clouds in the eye-wall region. The idea was to melt
the clouds in the eye-wall region as quickly as possible by
precipitation so that the diameter of the eye (average 40 km in
Indian seas) and the "warm core" associated with it could be
enlarged resulting in reduction of surface wind speed. A 30 per
cent success was achieved in reducing the wind speed but the
estimate was not outside the natural variation of surface wind
speed associated with a hurricane. In India, it would be a
hazardous and a highly expensive experiment not commensurate with
the gains to tame a cyclone .
Density of population, topography, bathymetry (depth and slope of
sea-bottom along a cost) and the intensity as well as frequency
of cyclones that could strike a coast decide the vulnerability of
the place.
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