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Chandigarh colder than Shimla, Manali and Srinagar; shivers at 8.9°C

Hisar in Haryana was the coldest at 0.5°C
Vehicles ply the streets of Chandigarh amid dense fog on a cold Wednesday morning. Tribune Photo: Pardeep Tewari

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Chandigarh, Mohali and Panchkula reeled under an intense cold to severe cold wave on Wednesday as dense to very dense fog, cloud cover, mist, haze and ground frost combined to push the Tricity region into one of its coldest spells of the season.

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Chandigarh recorded a temperature of just 8.9 degrees Celsius, the lowest of the winter so far, plunging by a 6.3 degrees from Tuesday and settling 9.5 degrees below normal. The sun failed to make even a brief appearance through the day, offering no respite from the biting chill.

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In a striking contrast, Chandigarh remained much colder than popular hill stations, with Manali, Shimla and Srinagar recording significantly higher day temperatures of 15.2, 14.6 and 13.2 degrees Celsius, respectively.

The persistent fog severely reduced visibility and kept daytime heating at bay across the region.

The night temperature in Chandigarh, which had dipped to a nine-year low of 2.8 degrees Celsius on the intervening night of Monday and Tuesday, showed only marginal recovery, rising by one degree to 3.8 degrees Celsius on the intervening night of Tuesday and Wednesday. Even this was 3.1 degrees below normal and almost half of Shimla’s comparatively warmer night temperature of 7.2 degrees Celsius. Relative humidity levels remained extremely high, ranging between 86 and 95 per cent, aiding the formation and persistence of dense fog.

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Weather conditions over the past 24 hours remained dry, but dense to very dense fog was observed at many places across Punjab and Haryana, including the Tricity, with cold wave to severe cold wave conditions prevailing at several locations. Chandigarh witnessed prolonged spells of dense fog from late night through morning, followed by mist and haze during the day and again dense fog by night.

Within the region, Chandigarh logged the lowest maximum temperature at 8.9 degrees Celsius, while nearby stations such as Ambala recorded around 9 degrees Celsius. Among minimum temperatures, Hisar in Haryana was the coldest at 0.5 degrees Celsius, while Chandigarh’s minimum stood at 3.8 degrees Celsius.

The India Meteorological Department has issued an orange alert for Thursday, warning of dense to very dense fog and cold wave conditions at a few places in the region. This will be followed by a yellow alert for dense fog at isolated places from Friday through next Tuesday. While the weather is likely to remain dry till January 17, light rainfall is expected at isolated places between January 18 and 20.

The forecast indicates a gradual rise in minimum temperatures by about 3 to 5 degrees Celsius over the next five days, with no major change thereafter.

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Tags :
#BelowNormalTemperatures#ColdWave#FoggyMornings#HisarTemperature#WinterInHaryanaChandigarhWeatherHaryanaWeatherNorthIndiaWeatherPunjabWeather
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