Heavy rain alert from MP to Bengal, know IMD’s update on Delhi’s weather.

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It is raining heavily in most parts of India, due to which rivers are in spate in many states and flood situation is prevailing. At the same time, due to heavy rains in some states, incidents like landslides are coming to the fore. Today i.e. on August 4, the Meteorological Department has issued an alert of heavy rain in different parts of Goa, Gujarat, West Bengal, Sikkim, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka, Maharashtra and Rajasthan.

Delhi’s climate

Intermittent rain continues in the country’s capital Delhi. Today i.e. on 4th August, Delhi will be cloudy and there may be light rain. The Meteorological Department has predicted heavy rain in Delhi on 6th and 7th August. According to IMD, the maximum temperature of Delhi is likely to remain between 33 to 35 degrees Celsius this entire week and the minimum temperature is likely to be around 26 to 28 degrees Celsius.

IMD's estimate

weather condition of the country

According to weather forecasting agency Skymet, during the next 24 hours, heavy rain is possible in Sikkim, Assam, South Bihar, Jharkhand, North Chhattisgarh, Eastern Uttar Pradesh, Western Rajasthan, Konkan and Goa and Coastal Karnataka. Whereas in West Bengal, Telangana, Vidarbha, Gujarat, East Rajasthan, Kerala, Arunachal Pradesh, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand, light to moderate rain may occur along with heavy rain at some places. Apart from this, light rain is possible in the rest of the country.

seasonal activities of the country

According to weather forecasting agency Skymet, there is a depression over Jharkhand and surrounding areas. During the next 48 hours, it is likely to move in west-northwest direction over North-West Jharkhand, South-East Uttar Pradesh, East Madhya Pradesh and adjoining North Chhattisgarh. At the mean sea level, the monsoon trough is now moving towards south-east till north-east Bay of Bengal through Bikaner, Jaipur, Satna, center of depression, Bankura, Canning.

Further, the east-west trough extends from northern Rajasthan across northern Madhya Pradesh to southern Assam, the cyclonic circulation is associated with a low pressure between 0.9 and 4.5 km above mean sea level over northern Jharkhand, Sub-Himalayan West Bengal. A cyclonic circulation has formed over Nagaland. An offshore trough at sea level is extending from South Gujarat to Kerala coast.

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