My country’s capital city is New Delhi. My five-day forecast will cover March 21 – 25,
2014. On March 21, the forecasted high
is 87 °F with a low of 62 °F and a 0% chance of precipitation. On March 22, the
forecasted high is 91 °F with a low of 64 °F and a 0% chance of
precipitation. On March 23, the
forecasted high is 88 °F with a low of 66 °F and a 10% chance of
precipitation. On March 24, the
forecasted high is 91 °F with a low of 76 °F and a 20% chance of
precipitation. On March 25, the forecasted
high is 90 °F with a low of 64 °F and a 0% chance of precipitation.
Above is a satellite image of New Delhi taken 21 March 2014
at 13:35 local time. As you can see in
the imagery, there is minimal cloud cover in the vicinity of New Delhi. The few clouds that are visible are likely low
warm clouds. The terrain around New
Delhi looks to be mostly dry with sparse vegetation.
For the regional map, there are multiple high and low
pressure systems located across the Asian continent. Three high pressure systems can be seen with
two located over Kazakhstan and one located over eastern China near
Shanghai. Barometric pressure readings for all three
high pressure systems are approximately 1024 mb. The high pressure systems are located aft of
two cold fronts moving across the Asian continent from west to east. There are numerous low pressure systems
located on the map, however the most prominent one is situated east of
Hokkaido, Japan.
Once zoomed into India, there is minimal pressure difference
across the entire subcontinent. Pressure
readings are around 1012 mb with only a slight drop to 1008 mb near the
northwestern border with Pakistan. There
are no visible fronts, high, or low pressure systems over India at this
time.
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