Hotter days ahead, warns Met City records 37.2°C, Calcuttans feel 46°C
A coachman and his horses take a break under a tree on the Maidan around 12.55pm on Tuesday Picture by Pradip Sanyal |
Rith Basu, 8 May 2019, Calcutta: The plan to tally paper slips with the votes registered on 20,625 of the 10.35 lakh electronic machines deployed nationwide cannot guarantee the integrity of the electoral process against targeted tampering or machine malfunction, specialists have said.
They have added that different sizes of random counts in different constituencies would have been a more reliable option. A researcher who was part of a panel enlisted by the Election Commission has agreed with these specialists and told The Telegraph that his answer would have been different had the poll panel reframed its question.
They have added that different sizes of random counts in different constituencies would have been a more reliable option. A researcher who was part of a panel enlisted by the Election Commission has agreed with these specialists and told The Telegraph that his answer would have been different had the poll panel reframed its question.
The
city recorded a maximum temperature of 37.2 degrees Celsius on Tuesday
but it felt like 46 degrees on the human skin because of high moisture
content in the air.
The maximum temperature as well as humidity
will rise in the coming days, making the weather more sultry, the Met
office has said. Rain, too, is unlikely in at least the next three days.
The mercury had touched 37.9 degrees Celsius on Monday, making
it the highest in the season so far. Tuesday’s reading was lower but
still two notches above normal and the weather turned from comparatively
dry to sweaty because of a cyclonic circulation that started drawing
moisture from the Bay of Bengal.
As
a result, the RealFeel, calculated by weather portal AccuWeather.com,
went up to 46 degrees Celsius on Tuesday. It was 44 degrees on Monday.
RealFeel is a measure of the effect of the temperature, relative humidity, wind and the angle of the sun on the human skin.
“On
Monday, hot Northwesterly winds from the plains of north and central
India blew into the city,” G.K. Das, director, India Meteorological
Department, Calcutta, said. “On Tuesday, moist Southwesterly winds began
to blow. The two together pushed up the humidity levels, making it
uncomfortable for people.”
A cyclonic circulation pulls air
towards itself because of its atmospheric pressure that is lower than
its surroundings. At present, the one over north Bengal is drawing
moisture from the Bay. Since the wind is passing over Calcutta and its
neighbouring areas, the humidity level is high, Das said.
Records
showed the minimum relative humidity, a measure of the moisture content
in the air during the hottest part of the day, went up to 48 per cent on
Tuesday from 32 per cent the day before.
The discomfort levels in
the city will go up because the maximum temperature and humidity are
both set to increase — the mercury because a heatwave is expected to
start in central India and the humidity because the cyclonic circulation
over north Bengal is set to be active for the next couple of days.
Discomfort
levels go up when heat and humidity are high as the body’s mechanism of
trying to lose heat fails. “The body produces sweat to bring down its
temperature when the conditions are hot. The sweat leaves behind a cool
feeling when it evaporates from the skin,” a Met official said. “When
the humidity level is high, sweat does not evaporate easily. The
mechanism fails and the body produces even more sweat making people
dehydrated.”
In hot and dry conditions, the maximum temperature
and the RealFeel tend to be similar as there is no additional discomfort
caused by the sweat lingering on the skin.
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