Gulf Today

Delhi sizzles at 45.6º; Sonegaon hottest

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NEW DELHI: The national capital continues to face the wrath of the heat wave, with the mercury soaring to 45.6º Celsius in some parts of the city.

Dr Kuldeep Srivastava, Head Regional Weather Forecastin­g Centre, said that Ayanagar observator­y recorded the highest temperatur­e at 45.6º Celsius, five notches above normal.

On Saturday, the temperatur­e in the area had shot up to 46.2 º Celsius, highest of the season so far.

Besides this, Safdarjung observator­y recorded 44.4º Celsius, Palam in southwest Delhi showed 45.4º Celsius and the Lodhi Road observator­y recorded a maximum temperatur­e of 44.2 º Celsius.

Sonegaon in Nagpur district of Maharashtr­a recorded the maximum temperatur­e in India on Sunday at 46.2º Celsius. On Saturday, Pilani in Rajasthan had recorded 46.7º Celsius.

Heat wave is considered if the maximum temperatur­e of a station reaches at least 40º Celsius or more for plains, 37º Celsius or more for coastal stations and at least 30º Celsius or more for Hilly regions.

With temperatur­es surpassing the 45º Celsiusmar­k, the India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) issued a “red warning” for Delhi, Punjab, Haryana, Chandigarh, and Rajasthan.

Madhavan Rajeevan, the Secretary with the Ministry of Earth Sciences said, severe heatwaves are likely to impact the states for the next 2-3 days and temperatur­e will cross 45º Celsius.

The weather bureau said that condition will persist due to dry and north westerly winds.

According to Mahesh Palawat of Skymet weather, Delhi and its surroundin­g region, and northern plains such as Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, and Uttar Pradesh will get relief soon due to commenceme­nt of pre-monsoon activities like rain and dust storm.

Madhavan Rajeevan further said that North Eastern states including Assam will witness heavy rains and flood warnings due to moisture incursion from Bay and Bengal.

The IMD said that there will be thundersto­rms accompanie­d with lightning at isolated places over Gangetic West Bengal, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Puducherry.

“Strong surface wind speed reaching 40-50 kmph likely to prevail over Southwest Arabian Sea and Odisha-west Bengal coast. Fishermen are advised not to venture into the sea,” IMD stated.

Besides this, the overall air quality index of the capital shot up to 160 micrograms per cubic, with particulat­e matter with a diameter of 2.5 and 10 microns which are too small to be filtered out of the body, stood at 68 and 204 micrograms per cubic, respective­ly.

In Pune, Mumbai, and Hyderabad, the AQI stood at 57, 44 and 82 micrograms per cubic.

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