Now, get extreme weather alerts on cell phones
Chennai: In a path-breaking discovery, a system has been developed through which extreme weather alerts on your mobile phone can avert casualties.According to Satyajit Ghosh, senior professor at the school of mechanical building sciences at
Chennai: In a path-breaking discovery, a system has been developed through which extreme weather alerts on your mobile phone can avert casualties.
According to Satyajit Ghosh, senior professor at the school of mechanical building sciences at Vellore Institute of Technology (VIT) in Tamil Nadu, his team has created image-based mobile phone alerts, connected to the weather research and forecasting (WRF) system.
“Cyclone alerts can save lives and property, but must be easily accessible. Our research explores how the WRF forecast can be interfaced with mobile telephony which has a deep penetration even in rural pockets of India,” said Ghosh.
The paper, published in the journal Atmospheric Science Letters, said that computer scientists at VIT were able to track the genesis, progression and landfall of cyclone Phailin, officially classified as a Category 5 tropical cyclone that hit India in October 2013 - affecting more than 12 million people.
“These evacuations revealed an urgent need for an effective alert system which could forewarn the majority of the population. By converting this information into images suitable for phones, we created a forecasting and warning system accessible to ordinary citizens,” added Ghosh.
According to Ghosh, known as an expert on clouds, the global perception of India's emerging IT prowess is lopsided.
According to Satyajit Ghosh, senior professor at the school of mechanical building sciences at Vellore Institute of Technology (VIT) in Tamil Nadu, his team has created image-based mobile phone alerts, connected to the weather research and forecasting (WRF) system.
“Cyclone alerts can save lives and property, but must be easily accessible. Our research explores how the WRF forecast can be interfaced with mobile telephony which has a deep penetration even in rural pockets of India,” said Ghosh.
The paper, published in the journal Atmospheric Science Letters, said that computer scientists at VIT were able to track the genesis, progression and landfall of cyclone Phailin, officially classified as a Category 5 tropical cyclone that hit India in October 2013 - affecting more than 12 million people.
“These evacuations revealed an urgent need for an effective alert system which could forewarn the majority of the population. By converting this information into images suitable for phones, we created a forecasting and warning system accessible to ordinary citizens,” added Ghosh.
According to Ghosh, known as an expert on clouds, the global perception of India's emerging IT prowess is lopsided.