NASA’s Landsat 9 satellite captures before and after peaks of Dubai floods from space | Trending

NASA’s Landsat 9 satellite captures before and after peaks of Dubai floods from space | Trending
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NASA recently shared striking before and after images of Dubai’s recent floods, caused by torrential rainfall that hit the United Arab Emirates (UAE) last week. The rainfall, which amounted to over a year and a half’s worth of rain in just one day, brought the desert city to a standstill. It also triggered flash floods across eastern regions, disrupting transportation and inundating roads.

Satellite images capture Abu Dhabi before (left) and after (right) historic flooding in several parts of the UAE. (NASA)
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Captured by NASA’s Landsat 9 satellite on April 19, these images depict vast pools of floodwater contrasting sharply with the region’s typically dry terrain. The deep blue hues in the images, highlighted in false color to emphasize the presence of water, reveal the extent of the flooding.

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One of the pictures shows flooding in Jabel Ali, a town 35 kilometers (22 miles) southwest of Dubai.

The image shows the before and after situation in Jabel Ali after flooding. (NASA)

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Another picture taken from space shows flooded areas in Abu Dhabi, the capital city of UAE, including Sheikh Zayed Road, a crucial thoroughfare that runs through Dubai and Abu Dhabi. Residential areas like Khalifa City and Zayed City also bear the brunt of the storms, with visible patches of water.

Before and after pics showing the flooding situation in UAE’s capital. (NASA)
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Experts, including Friederike Otto from Imperial College London’s Grantham Institute – Climate Change and the Environment, have linked the unprecedented rainfall to climate change. Otto said, “When we talk of heavy rainfall, we need to talk of climate change. Focusing on cloud seeding is misleading.”

She added, “Cloud seeding cannot create clouds from nothing that encourages water…already in the atmosphere to condense faster and drop water in certain places…first, you do need moisture. Without it, there would be no clouds. Even if cloud seeding did encourage clouds around Dubai to drop water, the atmosphere would have likely been carrying more water to form clouds in the first place because of human-induced climate change.”

“If humans continue to burn oil, gas, and coal, the climate will continue to warm, rainfall will continue to get heavy, and people will continue to lose their lives in floods,” Otto warned.

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Arfa Javaid is a journalist working with the Hindustan Times’ Delhi team. She covers trending topics, human interest stories, and viral content online….view detail

News / Trending / NASA’s Landsat 9 satellite captures before and after peaks of Dubai floods from space

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