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Two Storms Swirl Near India While Heavy Smog Lingers

November 6, 2019
Image of storms over india

As NOAA-20 passed over India on Nov. 5, 2019, the satellite captured this dynamic image of two storm systems as well as the thick blanket of smog that still lingers over the country.

Tropical Cyclone Maha is continuing to spin over the Arabian Sea, though it is steadily losing intensity and is now considered a “severe cyclonic storm.” At its peak, it was the equivalent of a Category 3 hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale. The storm developed off the southeastern coast of the country during the middle of last week, following a path similar to former Super Cyclone Kyarr toward the Arabian Peninsula. However, it has now started to turn back toward India in a new northeasterly track toward Gujarat. Meteorologists will be watching the storm carefully to get a better picture over the next 48 hours. It is currently expected to make landfall north of Mumbai near Diu, bringing heavy rains and strong winds.

To the west over the Bay of Bengal, a deep tropical depression is brewing that is expected to intensify into Cyclone Bulbul , according to the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD). The storm was expected to hit coastal regions of the state of Odisha by this weekend, but as of this morning , the IMD said it may instead head toward Sagar Island in West Bengal and Kepupara in Bangladesh. Despite this, fifteen districts in Odisha have been put on alert.

As the storm grows in strength, it is beginning to draw in some of the thick clouds of smog that are looming over the country.

This image was captured by the NOAA-20 satellite's VIIRS instrument , which scans the entire Earth twice per day at a 750-meter resolution. Multiple visible and infrared channels allow it to detect atmospheric aerosols, such as dust, smoke and haze associated with industrial pollution.