A monsoon is a wind pattern that reverses direction on a seasonal basis. The term was originally applied to monsoonal winds in the Arabian Sea and Indian Ocean. The word is also used to label the season in which this wind blows from the southwest in India and adjacent areas that is characterized by very heavy rainfall, and specifically the rainfall that is associated with this wind.
In terms of total precipitation, total area covered and the total number of people affected, the monsoons affecting the Indian Subcontinent dwarf the North American monsoon (also called the "Mexican", "southwest", "desert", or "Arizona" monsoon").
It is most often applied to the seasonal reversals of the wind direction along the shores of the Indian Ocean, especially in the Arabian Sea, that blow from the southwest during one half of the year and from the northeast during the other.
The monsoon is very relevant to the people of South India, especially the people of Kerala state. But environmental degradation has weakened or changed the monsoon system prevalent for many centuries.
In winter, the land cools off quickly, but the ocean retains heat longer. The hot air over the ocean rises, creating a low pressure area and a breeze from land to ocean while a large area of high pressure is formed over the land, intensified by wintertime radiational cooling.
Monsoons are similar to sea breezes, but they are much larger in scale, stronger, and are more constant.
Even more broadly, it is now understood that in the geological past, monsoon systems must have always accompanied the formation of supercontinents such as Pangea, with their extreme continental climates.
Meanwhile, a low pressure system develops over northern Australia and winds are directed toward Australia.
During the Northeast Winter Monsoon, Australia and southeast Asia receive large amounts of rainfall.
The monsoon is widely welcomed and appreciated by citydwellers as well, for it provides relief from the climax of summer in June. However, because of the lack of adequate infrastructure in place, most major cities are often adversely affected as well. The roads, already shoddy, take a battering each year; houses and streets at the bottom of slopes and beside rivers are waterlogged, slums are flooded, and the sewers and the rare hurricane drain start to back up and pour out toxic filth rather than drain it away. This translates into various minor casualties most of the time (although a large number of people in rural areas are struck dead by lightning while working in their fields); however, this lack of city infrastructure coupled with changing climate patterns also causes severe damage to and loss of property and life, as evidenced in the Mumbai floods of 2005.
The North American Monsoon is associated with an area of high pressure called the subtropical ridge that moves northward during the summer months and a thermal low (a trough of low pressure which develops from intense surface heating) over the Mexican Plateau and the desert southwest of the United States. The monsoon begins in late May to early June in southern Mexico and quickly spreads along the western slopes of the Sierra Madre Occidental, reaching Arizona and New Mexico in early July. The monsoon extends into the southwest United States as it matures in mid July when an area of high pressure, called the monsoon ridge, develops in the upper atmosphere over the four corners region, creating an easterly to southeasterly wind flow aloft. This wind flow pattern directs moisture originating in the Gulf of Mexico, Gulf of California and the tropical Pacific by way of northern Mexico into the region, setting off brief, but often torrential thunderstorms, especially over mountainous terrain. This activity is occasionally enhanced by the passage of easterly waves or the entrainment of the remnants of tropical storms.
As much as 70% of rainfall in the region occurs during the summer monsoon. Many desert plants are adapted to take advantage of this brief wet season in the usually-dry region. Flash flooding is a serious danger during the monsoon season. Dry washes can become raging rivers in an instant, even when no storms are visible as a storm can cause a flash flood tens of miles away (never camp in a dry wash in the desert). Lightning strikes are also a significant danger. Because it is dangerous to be caught in the open when these storms suddenly appear, many golf courses in Arizona have thunderstorm warning systems.
The North American Monsoon affects much of the United States and Mexico. Major drought episodes in the midwestern United States are associated with an amplification of the upper tropospheric monsoon ridge, along with a weakening of the western edge of the "Bermuda high" and the low-level jet stream over the great plains*.
Weather hazards | Winds | Arabic words | Flood
Monzón | Мусон | Monsun | Monzun | Monsun | Mussoon | Monzón | Musono | Montzoi | Mousson | मॉनसून | Muson | Monsone | מונסון | Moesson | Monsun | モンスーン | Monsun | Monção (clima) | Муссон | Monsun | Monsuuni | Monsun | Balaklaot | มรสุม | Gió mùa | 季风