Abstract

AbstractWe examined the seismic noise data collected from coastal and inland observatories in India, affected by the super cyclonic storm Amphan in the Indian Ocean, to understand the storm dynamics. Prominent disturbances in the 0.05–0.50 Hz frequency range were observed at the seismic stations, arising due to ocean‐continent interactions. The coastal stations displayed more pronounced ground motions contrary to the inland stations, with spindle‐shaped seismic wave envelopes intensifying as Amphan approached. The maximum ground displacements and energy occurred hours after the cyclone's eye, with maximum wind speed, moved away from the stations and not when it was close to the station. We observed significant variations in primary (0.05–0.10 Hz) and secondary microseism (0.10–0.50 Hz) energy during Amphan's directional changes. Secondary microseisms in short and long periods were found at 0.20–0.50 Hz and 0.10–0.20 Hz, respectively. Primary microseisms exhibited a simple pattern and were the weakest among the three energy bands. The CAL seismic station's seismic wave envelope showed an en‐echelon feature with increasing amplitude as Amphan approached, indicating the influence of ocean resonance and coastal wave reflection. This study demonstrates monitoring of the tropical cyclone paths based on seismic signatures obtained using microseisms recorded at seismic stations, a cost‐effective tool. Integrating these seismic signals with atmospheric observations in near real‐time would probably enable an effective monitoring of cyclones and timely issuance of their alerts.

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