Image by Welcome to All ! ツ from Pixabay
Image by Welcome to All ! ツ from Pixabay

New kind of atmospheric tropical cyclone discovered in the Indian Ocean

Embargoed until: Publicly released:
Peer-reviewed: This work was reviewed and scrutinised by relevant independent experts.

Flinders University oceanography experts have described a new kind of cyclone in the Indian Ocean near Sumatra after observing satellite surface winds in the region. The experts’ search for the trigger mechanisms of the Indian Ocean Dipole has led to the discovery of the new type of atmospheric tropical cyclone forming in the South-East Tropical Indian Ocean (SETIO) that they call ‘SETIO Cyclone’.

Journal/conference: Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science

Link to research (DOI): 10.1071/ES22020

Organisation/s: Flinders University

Funder: NA

Media release

From: Flinders University

Flinders University oceanography experts have described a new kind of cyclone in the Indian Ocean near Sumatra after observing satellite surface winds in the region.

The experts’ search for the trigger mechanisms of the Indian Ocean Dipole has led to the discovery of the new type of atmospheric tropical cyclone forming in the South-East Tropical Indian Ocean (SETIO) that they call ‘SETIO Cyclone’.

The study, just published in the Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science, will be presented at the  Australasian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society (AMOS) annual conference in Adelaide (November 28-December 1).

The Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) is a coupled atmosphere-ocean interaction in the tropical Indian Ocean that strongly affects the climate and rainfall variability of surrounding countries including Australia.

Flinders graduate Dr Ankit Kavi and his PhD supervisor Associate Professor Jochen Kaempf  say the newly described cyclones comprise westerly equatorial wind bursts and north-westerly winds along Sumatra west coast.

They found that SETIO cyclones are short-lived weather-like events that develop frequently during austral winter/spring and operate to maintain a warm surface ocean in the region.

“Dramatic changes happen in some years when SETIO cyclones fail to develop, and ambient winds trigger the appearance of cold seawater in a vast area strongly disturbing both winds and rainfall patterns over the Indian Ocean,” says Associate Professor Kaempf.

“In the natural sciences, it is of uttermost importance to identify so-called trigger processes, such as SETIO cyclones, that link the cause to an effect.

“This is a rare new discovery that sheds new light into the functioning of the IOD.”

Associate Professor Kaempf hopes that this work will attract future research funding to investigate the formation of SETIO cyclones in more detail as to improve the forecasting of the IOD.

The article, Synoptic-scale atmospheric cyclones in the South-East Tropical Indian Ocean (SETIO) and their relation to IOD variability (2022) by Ankit Kavi A and Jochen Kämpf, has been published in the Journal of Southern Hemisphere Earth Systems Science DOI: 10.1071/ES22020 (https://doi.org/10.1071/ES22020).

News for:

Australia
SA

Multimedia:

  • Dr Ankit Kavi
    Dr Ankit Kavi

    Flinders University oceanography experts Dr Ankit Kavi, left, and Associate Professor Jochen Kaempf with details of the latest study.

    File size: 352.9 KB

    Attribution: Flinders University

    Permission category: © - Only use with this story

    Last modified: 25 Nov 2022 12:33pm

    NOTE: High resolution files can only be downloaded here by registered journalists who are logged in.

  • IOD diagram
    IOD diagram

    IOD diagram

    File size: 39.8 KB

    Attribution: Flinders University

    Permission category: Free to share (must credit)

    Last modified: 26 Nov 2022 12:48am

    NOTE: High resolution files can only be downloaded here by registered journalists who are logged in.

Show less
Show more

Media contact details for this story are only visible to registered journalists.