New Delhi: Delhi's minimum temperature dropped to 9.5 degrees Celsius and a blanket of fog covered the national capital, affecting visibility on Tuesday morning.
On Monday, “very dense” fog had lowered visibility in some areas to “zero” metres.
The Safdarjung and Palam weather stations recorded visibility of 300 metres due to “moderate” fog at 8:30 am, an official of the India Meteorological Department (IMD) said.
The visibility should be around 800 metres at the airport for flights to take off, said Kuldeep Srivastava, the head of the IMD's regional forecasting centre.
According to the IMD, “very dense” fog is when visibility is between 0 and 50 metres, 51 and 200 is “dense”, 201 and 500 “moderate”, and 501 and 1,000 “shallow”.
The mercury is likely to dip further with the wind direction changing to westerly-northwesterly. These icy cold winds blow from snow-laden western Himalayas towards the plains.
READ: 'Invest India' bags UNCTAD's Investment Promotion Award 2020