Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

NASA tracks rains behind Kerala floods

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

NASA has released a video created using satellite data that provides an estimate of the intense rainfall over India in the past week and shows the spread of the resulting severe flooding in Kerala and parts of Karnataka.

The summer monsoon is a regular feature this time of the year in India, and it can bring heavy rains to the region. However, periodical­ly areas of low pressure can form within the general monsoon trough and bring even more rain.

Kerala is facing its worst floods in nearly a century that has left at least 231 people dead, and forced 3.14 lakh people out of their homes. The Centre has declared this as calamity of ‘severe nature’.

Rainfall accumulati­ons from August 13 to 20 showed two bands of heavy rain across India, NASA said in a statement.

The first band appeared much broader and extends across the northern part of the peninsula with weekly rainfall totals ranging from over 5 inches towards the western half of the peninsula to as much as 14 inches over parts of the eastern half towards the Bay of Bengal.

The first band is associated with the general monsoon circulatio­n. The second band appeared more concentrat­ed and intense and is closely aligned with the southwest coast of India and the Western Ghats where onshore flow was enhanced by an area of low pressure embedded within the general monsoon.

Weekly rainfall total in this band are generally over 10 inches with embedded areas exceeding 16 inches. The maximum estimated value from the data in this band was 18.5 inches, NASA said.

Although the extreme Himalayan topography is much more well-known, another contributi­ng factor to the heavy rains along the southwest coast of India is the Western Ghats, it said.

Though much smaller than the Himalayas, this mountain range runs parallel to the West Coast of India with many peaks over 2,000 metres.

As a result, the Western Ghats are well positioned to enhance rainfall along the west coast of India as they intercept the moisture laden air being drawn in off the warm waters of the northern Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea as part of the southwest monsoon circulatio­n.

The Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for GPM (IMERG) is used to estimate precipitat­ion from a combinatio­n of passive microwave sensors, including microwave sensor and infrared data.

The data is generated every half an hour, thereby allowing scientists to track rainfall across the globe almost in real time.

WASHINGTON:

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