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    Why has India developed an atmospheric testbed near Bhopal?

    • March 16, 2024
    • Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
    • Category: DPN Topics
    No Comments

     

     

    Why has India developed an atmospheric testbed near Bhopal?

    Subject: Science and tech

    Section: Space sector

    Context:

    • On March 12, the first phase of India’s Atmospheric Research Testbed in Central India (ART-CI) was inaugurated at Silkheda in Sehore district, located about 50 km northwest of Bhopal in Madhya Pradesh.

    More on news:

    • Funded by the Ministry of Earth Sciences (MoES), the facility will house 25 high-end meteorological instruments for studying vital cloud processes associated with the monsoons over central India’s Monsoon Core Zone (MCZ).

    What is the Atmospheric Research Testbed (ART)?

    • The ART is an open-field, focused observational and analytical research programme at Silkheda.
    • The facility aims to conduct ground-based observations of weather parameters like temperature, wind speeds, etc. and in-situ (on-site) observations of the transient synoptic systems – like low-pressure areas and depressions that form in the Bay of Bengal – during the southwest monsoon season from June to September.
    • The setup at ART will also be used for calibrating and validating various satellite-based observations, part of weather predictions and forecasting.
    • Spread over 100 acres, the ART has been developed by the Ministry of Earth Sciences for Rs 125 crore.
    • The Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology (IITM), Pune, is in charge of the operations.
    • Under the first phase, remote sensing-based and in-situ measurements using 25 meteorological instruments have commenced. 
    • In the second phase, ART will deploy instruments such as a radar wind profiler and balloon-bound radiosonde, and soil moisture and temperature measuring equipment.

    Why is having an Atmospheric Research Testbed important?

    • At present, 45% of India’s labor force is employed in the agriculture sector.
    • Much of Indian agriculture is rainfed, as is cultivation along the Monsoon Core Zone (MCZ), which spans the central India region from Gujarat to West Bengal.
    • The southwest monsoon season accounts for 70 percent of the country’s annual average rainfall (880mm).
    • Throughout India, the majority of Kharif cultivation is undertaken between July and August, which see an average monthly rainfall of 280.4mm and 254.9mm (1971–2020 average), respectively.
    • During this four-month-long season, several rain-bearing synoptic systems, namely the low pressures or depressions, develop in the Bay of Bengal.
    • Inherently, these systems move westwards/northwestwards over to the Indian mainland and pass through the MCZ, causing bountiful rainfall.

    Why is it important to have data about monsoons over central India?

    • Studies have correlated the all-India rainfall performance to the rainfall received over the central India region, highlighting its importance.
    • The India Meteorological Department (IMD) issues rainfall forecasts for the country’s four homogeneous regions – north, west, east and south peninsular India.
    • It issued a special rainfall forecast for the MCZ, which is considered India’s food bowl.
    • Central India, therefore, acts as a natural laboratory for scientists and meteorologists to perform a hands-on study of the Indian monsoons.
    • They can record data and make observations about the allied systems, clouds, and other associated physical and atmospheric parameters.
    • Additionally, climate change is driving erratic rainfall patterns in the tropical regions, like India.
    • It has also strengthened the low-pressure systems, which are aided by high temperatures. 
    • This results in very heavy rainfall recorded along their trajectory during the monsoons.
    • Now, with ART, scientists will be able to generate and obtain long-term observations on cloud microphysics, precipitation, convection, and land-surface properties, among a host of other parameters.
    • This information will be assimilated and fed into the numerical weather models to enhance forecast output, especially the rainfall forecasts.
    • More accurate forecasts will ultimately help the farming community plan their activities better.

    Why Madhya Pradesh?

    • The ART has been established at Silkheda, a location that falls directly in line with the path of major rain-bearing synoptic systems. 
    • This will facilitate direct monitoring and tracking.
    • Besides, the locality is pristine and free of anthropogenic and other pollutants, making it the best site in central India for setting up sensitive, high-end meteorological instruments and observatories for recording data.

    What instruments are ART equipped with?

    • To obtain continuous observations of convection, clouds, and precipitation, and monitor the major modes of variabilities, the ART is equipped with over two dozen high-end instruments, radars and more. 
    • At 72 meters, ART will house India’s tallest meteorological tower.
    • Some of the instruments deployed are an aethalometer for performing aerosol studies, a cloud condensation nuclei counter, a laser ceilometer to measure cloud sizes, a micro rain radar to calculate raindrop size and its distribution, and a Ka-band cloud radar and a C-band doppler weather radar to help track the movement of rain-bearing systems over this zone.
    Science and tech Why has India developed an atmospheric testbed near Bhopal?
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