• Thursday, July 04, 2024

HEADLINE STORY

Delhi witnesses unusual fog in May, its hottest month, as minimum temperature plummets: ‘This is surreal!’

Delhi’s India Gate engulfed with fog. (ANI Photo/ Rahul Singh)

By: Shubham Ghosh

Delhi, the capital of India which otherwise witnesses sultry weather at this time of the year, saw an unusually shallow fog on Thursday (4) morning, leaving its residents bemused.

May has historically been the hottest month in the city with the mean temperature hovering around 40 degrees Celsius.

However, on Thursday, the capital’s minimum temperature this morning dropped to 15.8 degrees Celsius, making it the third coldest morning in May in 122 years.

Delhi is experiencing an unexpected pattern with cloudy skies, sporadic rain, and cool weather, which officials attribute to back-to-back western disturbances affecting northwest India.

Residents posted videos and pictures of fog blanketing the city’s skyline on social media.

“Fog on a May morning in Delhi. Never ever before have I experienced this in over 4 decades of living in this city. This is surreal!” a Twitter user said.

“Fog in Delhi on a summer morning! Same time last year, we were in a heat wave!” another person said.

Weather department officials said high moisture content in the air, calm winds and a significant difference between the daytime and nighttime temperatures create conditions that are favourable for the formation of fog.

According to the India Metereological Department, shallow fog is when visibility is between 501 and 1,000 metres.

The Safdarjung Observatory, Delhi’s primary weather station, recorded 30 millimetres (mm) of rainfall in 24 hours ending at 8.30 am on Thursday.

It logged a maximum temperature of 30.6 degrees Celsius, nine degrees below normal, on Wednesday (3) and a minimum temperature of 15.8 degrees Celsius on Thursday, the third lowest in the month since the weather-keeping started in 1901.

The all-time low of 15.1 degrees Celsius was recorded on May 2, 1969. The city recorded a minimum temperature of 15.2 degrees Celsius on May 2, 1982.

Humidity levels oscillated between 80 per cent and 100 per cent at most places in the city.

Another spell of rain is likely Friday (5) onwards, weather officials said.

Delhi recorded more than 20 mm of rainfall in April, the highest in the month since 2017, due to back-to-back western disturbances.

The Safdarjung Observatory recorded the maximum temperature at least 10 degrees below normal on Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday due to intermittent rainfall and cloudy weather under the influence of successive western disturbances.

The maximum temperature settled at 28.7 degrees Celsius on Sunday (30) and dropped to 26.2 degrees Celsius on Monday (1), making it the coolest first day of May ever since the weather keeping started in the country. The city recorded a maximum of 28.3 degrees Celsius on Tuesday.

Another western disturbance is likely to affect northwest India starting May 5. Under its influence, cloudy skies and sporadic rain is predicted in the capital until May 7, an IMD official said.

The maximum temperature is predicted to remain below 35 degrees Celsius until May 8.

The Met office has predicted below-normal maximum temperatures and fewer heatwave days in northwest India in May.

(With PTI inputs)

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