Published 22:17 IST, November 19th 2024
‘Interstellar Should Have Been Filmed Here’: Noida Balcony Photo of Murky Yellow Sky Goes Viral
A photo of Noida's murky yellow skies goes viral, with users comparing the scene to disaster movies amid hazardous pollution levels in Delhi-NCR.
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Viral: A photo of yellow-tinted skies ed from balcony of a Delhi-NCR resident has gone viral on social media after many users compared view to 'post-apocalyptic' Hollywood movies. post shared on X by user @BromActivist showed view from balcony of a friend who sent him photo to show murky skies as pollution levels hit hazardous levels in national capital and its surrounding areas.
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"Friend sent this view from her balcony in Noida," post re. photo was viewed nearly 1 million times and flooded with comments from users who were stunned to see poor air quality that y claimed reminded m of disaster movies.
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Users Reactions to Post
"Interstellar should have been filmed here inste of using effects," wrote one user. Anor one said, “Actually, people inhale oxygen and exhale CO2 fine... body fights back on or pollutants/irritants.”
A third user said, “Look at construction quality of his high-rise, evident from edges of balcony.”
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Delhi AQI gets worse
As air quality in Delhi remained 'severe plus' on Tuesday, a report by news agency AFP said PM2.5 pollutant levels was 60 times World Health Organisation's recommended daily limit. On Tuesday, average air quality index (AQI) was recorded at 488, 'severe plus' category.
Schools, except for gres 10 and 12, have opted for offline classes in view of deteriorating pollution levels. air quality in Delhi has been falling since October. AQI has furr worsened now, owing to smoke from firecrackers and from stubble burning, something that most commonly comes from Punjab and Haryana.
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As air quality in Delhi remained 'severe plus' on Tuesday, a report by news agency AFP said PM2.5 pollutant levels was 60 times World Health Organisation's recommended daily limit.
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On Tuesday, average air quality index (AQI) was recorded at 488, 'severe plus' category.
global health-monitoring body recommends that annual average level of PM2.5 should not exceed 5 μg/m3, and 24-hour average exposure should not be more than 15 μg/m3 for over 3-4 days in a row.
22:17 IST, November 19th 2024