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Surface temp tops 60°C, satellite images show

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com

Mahendraga­rh

Hisar

Sri Ganganagar

Biikaner

Churu

Jaisalmer

Barmer

Jhunjhunu

Akola

Wardha

Chandrapur

NEW DELHI: Surface land temperatur­es exceeded 60 degrees Celsius over some parts of northwest India, according to imagery captured by satellites on Saturday. Images of land surface captured by INSAT 3D, Copernicus Sentinel 3 and a NASA satellite indicated that land surface temperatur­e over pockets of northwest India raised concerns among several scientists about the severe impacts of the ongoing heatwave.

“Land surface temperatur­es from different satellite sensors. One common observatio­n i.e was able to obtain an accurate measuremen­t of #LST of the ground, which exceeded 60°C in several areas today,” tweeted Ashim Mitra, scientist at India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD) who specialise­s in satellites. “The current extreme #heatwave in #Pakistan and #India as seen today, on the fourth intense hot day, by #Copernicus #Sentinel3 LST (Land Surface Temperatur­e, not Air!). LST collected on April 29 shows max value exceeding 62°C/143°F. Gaps due to cloud/ snow/nodata. #ClimateEme­rgency,” tweeted ADAM Platform, an advanced geospatial data management platform.

M Mohapatra, IMD director general, said this data shouldn’t be trusted before conducting ground verificati­on. “Satellite observatio­ns are taken from 36,000km away from the surface. They can be misleading if

Delhi

Jhansi Chhatarpur

Banda

Palamu Allahabad Bilaspur Note: The gridded background colors show maximum temperatur­e based on GFS forecasts for 10:30 AM to 5:30 PM on April 30, made by the model at 5:30 AM on April 30. Named labels show temperatur­e at stations of IMD. Average for the district may be different from the data for individual stations. not verified. The record highest land temperatur­e was taken in Rajasthan which was 52.6°C. This data can create fear and panic so we should act responsibl­y.”

“Do you know what 60°C means? The roads and other infrastruc­ture will melt. I have seen roads melting in Rajasthan at 50°C. We should be very careful and run ground assessment­s first,” added another scientist, who declined to be named.

The European Space Agency’s website also showed land surface temperatur­es to be nearing 55°C over many parts of northwest India and crossing 60°C over several pockets. “This image, produced using data from the Copernicus Sentinel-3 mission, shows the land surface temperatur­e across most of the nation. Owing to the absence of cloud cover on 29 April (10:30 local time), the Sentinel-3 mission was able to

TEMPERATUR­E

Source: 0.25 degree GFS forecast for 2m temp from US National Weather Service; IMD station-wise data obtain an accurate measuremen­t of the land surface temperatur­e of the ground, which exceeded 60°C in several areas. The data shows that surface temperatur­e in Jaipur and Ahmedabad reached 47°C, while the hottest temperatur­es recorded are southeast and southwest of Ahmedabad (visible in deep red) with maximum land surface temperatur­es of around 65°C,” ESA said.

“We noticed these land surface temperatur­es last evening. They are extremely high. Some of the highest land temperatur­es were recorded over Rajasthan, Gujarat, Telangana, Punjab and Madhya Pradesh. Anticyclon­ic winds are bringing very hot air to the land, rainfall has been subdued so land is dry and there is direct sunshine,” explained Mitra. He added that the normal surface temperatur­es expected during this season are between 45 and 55 degrees Celsius.

“This data is unpreceden­ted. We want to verify with our team and then comment on it,” said Pushpendra Johari, Senior VP Sustainabi­lity, RMSI Pvt. Ltd, a global disaster risk management company.

Experts have suggested that unusually high temperatur­es this March and April are linked to the climate crisis. “...The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, in its Sixth Assessment Report, said that heatwaves and humid heat stress will be more intense and frequent in South Asia this century,” the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on.

The observatio­ns are taken from 36,000km away from the surface. They can be misleading if not verified. M MOHAPATRA, director general

IMD

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