Why in the news?

  • The IMD has forecast the formation of two cyclonic storms in the Bay of Bengal, which may undergo a Fujiwhara interaction.

Fujiwhara Effect

  • What is it?: The Fujiwhara Effect describes the interaction between two nearby cyclonic systems (tropical cyclones, depressions, or vortices) in which they begin to rotate around a common centre.
  • Occurrence: It happens when,
    • Two cyclonic systems come within ~1,000 km of each other (threshold varies with storm size/strength).
    • Both systems are strong enough to influence each other’s circulation.
  • Types of Fujiwhara Effect:
    • Mutual Orbiting:
      • The cyclones revolve around a common pivot point.
      • Typically, both rotate counter-clockwise in the Northern Hemisphere and clockwise in the Southern Hemisphere.
    • Absorption / Merger: A stronger cyclone may absorb the weaker one.
    • Deflection: Interaction may redirect one or both cyclones away from their expected tracks.
  • Effects
    • Unpredictable movement forecasting becomes challenging.
    • Possible rapid intensification or weakening, depending on energy transfer.
    • Can lead to changes in rainfall distribution and landfall location.
    • In rare cases, it can produce super cyclonic behaviour if environments are favourable.
  • Examples
    • In 2017, East Pacific Hurricanes Hilary and Irwin orbited each other, with Hilary strengthening as Irwin weakened and changed course.
    • 2025 Atlantic Hurricanes Imelda and Humberto interacted, marking a rare occurrence in that basin; another potential case involved Humberto and a Caribbean low.

Source: Down To Earth