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sidebar3.jpg Chris Mooney is a freelance writer and the author of two books, The Republican War on Science and Storm World. For more information see his bio, events, articles, or visit him on Wikipedia and YouTube.

Sheril Kirshenbaum is a marine biologist at Duke University. Sometimes she's a classicist, radio jock, or congressional staffer. Never sure what's next, she continues to enjoy the journey...

Chris & Sheril have a sound track and are currently working on ScienceDebate2008, which they just described in:

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« Storm World on Quirks and Quarks | Main | Stranger in a Strange Land: South Africa »

Don't Look Now, But...

Category: Hurricanes
Posted on: June 24, 2007 1:03 PM, by Chris C. Mooney

IndianSSTJune22.png

Sea surface temperatures in the North Indian tropical cyclone basin as of June 22, courtesy of Accuweather.

Is a repeat of Cyclone Gonu--now estimated to have caused $ 6 billion in damage to Oman and Iran (actually much less than worst case scenarios would have predicted)--possible in the coming week?

Over the past half week, a tropical cyclone known only as 03B developed in the Bay of Bengal and quickly moved ashore over the Indian subcontinent before it could intensify much. Still, meteorology blogger Margie Keiper writes that the associated precipitation contributed to the deaths of hundreds in India and Pakistan.

And now, the thick cloud cluster has moved back out over water, into the warm Arabian Sea, which fostered Gonu just under a month ago. Here's the latest satellite image from the Indian Meteorological Department:

IMDimage.jpg

Yesterday, Accuweather's Jim Andrews wrote of his concern that 03B has potential to become a major tropical cyclone in the Arabian Sea, and added, "based upon numerical forecasts, it is safe to say that this storm holds serious destructive potential, especially for southern Pakistan, but also for southeastern Iran."

I'm no expert and no forecaster, but this is one to watch, certainly....and even if it doesn't develop, it seems certain to rain a lot somewhere.

Comments

This is scary. Is anyone readying the international rescue team?

Posted by: Monado | June 24, 2007 2:26 PM

Chris -

Thanks for pointing this out. There's an interesting corollary - a posited relationship between warm anomalies in the Indian Ocean and western Pacific and broad-scale synchronous drought. Marty Hoerling identified this in Science in 2003*, and it's probably worth exploring whether something like this is going on today.

* The Perfect Ocean for Drought, Science 31 January 2003: Vol. 299. no. 5607, pp. 691 - 694

Posted by: John Fleck | June 24, 2007 2:46 PM

There's plenty shear just to it's south. In order to reach major hurricane strength, it needs to head straight for the Gulf of Oman, where shear is low, and not deviate south at all. That seems likely, but not overwhelmingly so.
To my amateur eyes, the upper level conditions do not look as good for this cyclone as they did for Gonu. On the other hand, there is more deep warm water than there was when Gonu formed (the sea surface temperatures imply this, but it's not always necessarily so; in some areas, particularly the East Pacific, it is not unusual for the surface to warm while deeper waters cool or remain stable). It's the depth of the warm water (and the upper air conditions) that makes the difference between category 3 and category 5.

Posted by: llewelly | June 24, 2007 5:21 PM

There are many useful informations in this great article...I really enjoy reading the whole blog that you write. Thanks!

Posted by: übersetzungen | February 19, 2008 5:17 PM

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