The researchers from Florida State University in the US developed a method that uses rainfall rates to mark the span of the Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM) at any given location throughout the affected region.
For generations, scientists have struggled to produce a model for reliably defining the duration of the monsoon.
No existing system has allowed researchers to reliably define the parameters of the season at this fine a scale, researchers said.
"We have gone down to specific locations, we have covered the whole country, and we have objectively defined the onset and demise dates for any given year," said Misra, lead investigator of the study published in the journal Climate Dynamics.
The lack of a clear, granular and objective benchmark for ISM onset and demise for all areas of the country has been a longtime source of consternation for people, researchers said.
Researchers said that many rhythms of Indian political and agricultural life can be destabilised by dubious or false claims of monsoon onset.
"That leads to tremendous amounts of frustration and confusion for the general public and for the people who are trying to monitor the monsoon because nobody has really gotten down to do it at a granular scale," Misra said.
The new system, which ties the onset of the monsoon to location-specific rainfall thresholds, can work to allay that frustration, he said.
A more inclusive method will allow officials and researchers throughout the country to define the monsoon season using a standardised system that, through rigorous testing, has been shown to capture ISM evolution comprehensively.
Anchoring the definition of onset and demise solely in local rain rates eliminates the need to rely on less accessible atmospheric variables, researchers said.
This streamlined approach makes it considerably easier to monitor monsoon evolution, they said.
"Our research enables quite easy real-time monitoring of the onset and demise of the Indian monsoon," Misra said.
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