Social Sciences, asked by johnsia446, 10 months ago

conclusion for fani cyclone

Answers

Answered by rtnair123
0

Answer:

Many buildings have also been damaged, by the flying objects carried by the cyclone. Explanation: It was expected that the storm shall hit West Bengal, but it's direction changed and it moved towards Bangladesh. Many precautions were also made in West Bengal, and even many trains were canceled.

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Answered by mishrasatyam2006
1

Bangladesh or oddisha

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Explanation:

The second named storm and the first severe cyclonic storm of the 2019 North Indian Ocean cyclone season, Fani originated from a tropical depression that formed west of Sumatra in the Indian Ocean on 26 April. Vertical wind shear at first hindered the storm's development, but conditions became more favorable on 30 April. Fani rapidly intensified into an extremely severe cyclonic storm and reached its peak intensity on 2 May as a high-end extremely severe cyclonic storm—the equivalent of a high-end Category 4 major hurricane. Fani weakened before making landfall, and its convective structure rapidly degraded thereafter, degenerating into a remnant low on 4 May, and dissipating on the next day.

Extremely Severe Cyclonic Storm Fani

Extremely severe cyclonic storm (IMD scale)

Category 4 tropical cyclone (SSHWS)

Cyclone Fani at peak intensity on 2 May, while approaching Odisha

Formed 26 April 2019

Dissipated 5 May 2019

(Remnant low after 4 May)

Highest winds 3-minute sustained: 215 km/h (130 mph)

1-minute sustained: 250 km/h (155 mph)

Lowest pressure 937 hPa (mbar); 27.67 inHg

Fatalities 89 total

Damage $1.81 billion (2019 USD)

Areas affected Sri Lanka, Odisha, Andhra Pradesh, East India, Bangladesh, Bhutan

Part of the 2019 North Indian Ocean cyclone season

Prior to Fani's landfall, authorities in India and Bangladesh moved at least a million people each from Fani's projected path onto higher ground and into cyclone shelters, which is thought to have reduced the resultant death toll.[3] As of 12 May 2019, 89 people are known to have been killed by Fani in eastern India and Bangladesh. Fani caused about US$1.81 billion in damages in both India and Bangladesh

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