When Dryness Intrudes, Floods Ensue

December 15, 2023

Share this article

New findings from the Weizmann Institute of Science may improve flood warnings for millions living on the Indian subcontinent.

In 2018, in the Indian state of Kerala, more than 400 people died in a single series of floods that displaced millions. Flooding is a regular feature of the yearly monsoon season in tropical Asia, but until now it has been difficult to predict how and when the normally heavy monsoon rainfall would ratchet up into a nightmare event of severe flooding.

The new Weizmann research may broaden the forecast window by pointing to an event – surprisingly, the arrival of dry air – that may presage extra-strong rains.

Dr Shira Raveh-Rubin of Weizmann’s Earth and Planetary Sciences Department led the study together with postdoctoral fellow Dr Deepika Rai. Their results appeared in npj Climate and Atmospheric Science.

Dr Deepika Rai

The monsoon rains that pelt the Indian subcontinent from July to September are multifaceted phenomena, complicated by a combination of numerous factors, including global jet streams that shift and tilt. The Weizmann study has identified a previously unknown complicating factor: a subtype of airstream known as a dry intrusion.

As their name implies, these airstreams are made up of dry air, but air that is also very cold, especially in comparison with the steamy wet air of a monsoon downpour. It had been assumed, somewhat reasonably, that dry intrusions – which sink down in the troposphere, the lowest layer of Earth’s atmosphere – were responsible for monsoon breaks, short dryish spells in the rainy season.

Dry intrusions that cross the equator from the south to the north are only known to occur around the Indian subcontinent.

Raveh-Rubin and Rai looked at the data for 40 years of dry intrusions in this part of the world – 137 recorded instances between 1979 and 2018 – and compared them with precipitation records from around the same time. Surprisingly, they found that these dry intrusions were not followed by dry weather, but rather by an increase in rainfall – of 17 percent, on average, and in some cases, of over 100 percent.

“How exactly does dry air produce more rain?” asked Raveh-Rubin.

To understand what was happening, the two researchers applied a model taken from mechanical physics that involves monitoring the stats of moving ‘packets’ of air as they change in temperature, location and water content. With this tracking they were able to see an increase in total water and to explain its cause. The dry air of the intrusions over the Indian Ocean acts like a kind of sponge. The larger the moisture gap between the ocean surface and these packets of dry air, the more water they will soak up from the ocean, transporting that water northward toward India’s west coast on the Arabian Sea.

While similar studies have used this model to understand the patterns of rainfall and breaks in the monsoon season, they hadn’t examined the particular dry intrusions flowing over the equator, which behave differently than their overland counterparts. That is why, says Raveh-Rubin, they had assumed that this phenomenon brings dryer, rather than wetter, weather.

“In essence, this is an instance of the Southern Hemisphere’s winter breaking into the northern half’s summer,” she said.

Raveh-Rubin thinks this mechanism has been overlooked until now, in part, because monsoon dynamics tend to include mechanisms that operate on longer time scales – months or years – as well as slower phenomena such as the rise in sea water surface temperatures, while the dynamics of dry intrusions take place on the scale of days or weeks.

For Raveh-Rubin and her group, the science of dry intrusions is neither dry nor intrusive. It is, to her, a palpable connection between abstract physics and reality.

“It’s not just a simplified theory. You can see it in real life, and in the data, and you can see it with your own eyes when you go outside,” she said.

The added possibility of providing accurate flood warnings in places like India and Bangladesh, where millions live on the flood plains, is the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. Raveh-Rubin believes that dry intrusion monitoring – a capability that exists today – could significantly improve the forecasting of specific peaks in rainfall that might lead to flooding.

In particular, advance warnings of such extreme weather events could be extended from a day or two to about a week, enabling proper preparation and, if needed, evacuation, potentially saving hundreds if not thousands of lives.

Raveh-Rubin and her group intend to continue studying the effects of dry intrusions on the Asian monsoons and refining their model. Among other things, they want to know how and why these patterns form in this way. The group also intends to examine the occurrence of dry intrusions worldwide, searching for similar effects in other places. By doing this, they hope to improve our ability to predict heavier rains and more severe flooding in the future.

Share this article

Latest news

Sensing Fat

Sensing Fat

New research from the Weizmann Institute of Science reveals that the nervous system can sense fat tissue and that blocking this ability protects mice from metabolic disorders. Popular belief holds that our senses gather information only about the external world, but...

Food: Friend, Not Foe – New Study Explains Why

Food: Friend, Not Foe – New Study Explains Why

Weizmann Institute of Science researchers have revealed the cellular network behind oral tolerance, the immune mechanism that enables us to eat food safely.  If we have an allergy to peanuts, strawberries or dairy, we are quick to blame our immune systems. But...

MRI Gets a Nano-Sized Upgrade

MRI Gets a Nano-Sized Upgrade

Weizmann Institute of Science researchers have achieved an MRI resolution of one billionth of a metre, paving the way for the most detailed images of individual molecules ever produced. This new development will play a major role in the materials and pharmaceutical...

Beyond Words

Beyond Words

Weizmann Institute researchers have revealed that the melody of spoken English functions as a distinct language, with a vocabulary and rules of syntax.  The findings lay the foundation for an AI that will understand language beyond just words. The AI revolution, which...

All embroidery colours

All embroidery colours

AI-based technology developed in Dr Liat Keren's lab at the Weizmann Institute of Science has shown it enables an unprecedented view of processes in body tissues. Artificial intelligence systems are working magic in many areas of the life sciences – they help decipher...