Abstract

Within the North Indian Ocean basin, tropical cyclone (TC) activity over the Bay of Bengal (BoB) is substantially greater than over the Arabian Sea (AS). The authors attempt to quantify the roles of specific environmental factors in order to understand the reasons for this difference between the two basins. Environmental variables are considered in the basin as a whole and in the immediate times and places at which cyclognesis and storm intensification occur. The results for the two sub-basins are compared to determine which environmental variables differed significantly between the sub-basins. A tropical cyclone genesis index (TCGI) is also examined to determine whether the AS-BoB difference can be explained in terms of the environment using this index. Though the overall level of activity in both is under-predicted by the index by about a factor of two, the index shows a relative diffrence between the basins that is approximately consistent with that in observations. Based on that partial success, climatologies of the individual factors that comprise the index are examined to determine which ones are most important in the AS-BoB diffrence. Column relative humidity and vertical wind shear emerge as the most likely candidates. A closer examination suggests that column relative humidity is the more important factor and thus that the AS has fewer cyclones than the BoB primarily because it has a drier lower troposphere.

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