Friday, 19 April 2024

 

 

LATEST NEWS CGC Jhanjeri’s Fashion Show MERAKI 2024 goes in Style CEO Maneesh Garg briefs about Postal ballot facility for absentee voters Alumnus Sh. Ram Kumar Mittal, Founder & President of Swami International, USA, Inspires Students During Campus Visit to PEC In a first, CEO Sibin C holds Facebook live interaction with Punjab voters Top 9 Monalisa Hot Web Series To Watch In April 2024 | 5 Dariya News Drug awareness rally under NSS camp by RBU students Wheat planted using surface feeders at 40 places in barnala district : Punamdeep Kaur NSS PEC Organized Blood Donation Camp in Collaboration with PGIMER Biomed lab science day celebrated at RBU Singer Javed Ali recorded the song for Speed India Entertainment & HGV Anup Jalota, Udit Narayan, Babul Supriyo, and other singers received Dr. K.J. Yesudas Achievement Award Unique Initiative: Punjab's CEO Sibin C to go live on Facebook on April 19th Special monitoring of Social Media for Model Code of Conduct compliance - Chief Electoral Officer Anurag Agarwal In unique initiative, administration launches video helpline number 83605-83697 for speech and hearing-impaired voters Sakshi Sawhney directs procurement agencies to expedite wheat lifting Will make Punjabi the number one language in Chandigarh - Sanjay Tandon Vigilance Bureau nabs ASI for accepting Rs 4,500 bribe Magnificent Display of Indian Culture at LPU's annual 'One India-2024' Cultural Fest Suzuki Motorcycle India expands its footprint in Kerala Unlike Ravneet Bittu, Congress Has Always Respected Beant Singh Ji’s Legacy: Amarinder Singh Raja Warring Kunwar Vijay Pratap's speech should be taken seriously and investigation should be conducted: Partap Singh Bajwa

 

Outdated Bihar equipment prevented forecast of Nepal quake: Geologist

Listen to this article

Web Admin

Web Admin

5 Dariya News

Patna , 05 May 2015

A Bihar-based geologist has claimed that he and his team of scientists could have predicted the killer earthquake which hit Nepal on April 25 if they had been provided with the latest equipment.The quake resulted in a loss of more than 7,000 lives, with over 14,000 injured."We could have predicted the earthquake in Nepal and parts of Bihar with perfect accuracy if we were provided advanced equipment instead of old and outdated analysers," says Dr M N Sinha, head of the Department of Geology at Patna University.Sinha told IANS "it was unfortunate that a fault in the data and image transmitted from Ionospheric Product Services(IPS) linked to an Australian satellite blocked our researchers from forecasting temblor in Nepal."He said that the images transmitted from IPS on April 22 indicated ionic disturbance in Myanmar, not Nepal."Had we been using advanced equipment we could have issued an alert to Nepal, not Myanmar," Sinha said.

He recalled how his team had issued a wrong alert and could not foresee the tragedy that would hit Bihar too. In all, 58 people had died in Bihar from the impact of the temblor."We are dependent on secondary sources to study the data and images. That's where the real problem lies," he said.Sinha blamed 'red tapism' for not setting up an Advance Centre for Seismic Research in his department, despite the fact that a proposal was mooted and sanctioned by Chief Minister Nitish Kumar in November 2013."Delay in clearing files by top officials prevented us from taking a lead in warning the world before the tragedy struck," Sinha said.An advanced centre for seismic research, he said, is equipped with modern seismographs,linkage facilities with satellites and geomagnetic data analysers to examine the crust of earth.

He said that in 2013, a prediction of an imminent quake in Pakistan and Iran by his department researcher Umesh Prasad Verma had come true. Following this, the then chief minister approved a proposal for such a centre in Patna.Sinha said the main technique developed for quake prediction by researchers of his department was based on total electron count (TEC) in the ionosphere, 18 km to 80 km above the earth's surface."It is a simple and easy process to analyse data and images. In fact, ionospheric disturbances analysed with the help of satellite data precisely indicates the place and time of earthquake, albeit with some variation," Sinha said.

 

Tags: HADSA WORLD

 

 

related news

 

 

 

Photo Gallery

 

 

Video Gallery

 

 

5 Dariya News RNI Code: PUNMUL/2011/49000
© 2011-2024 | 5 Dariya News | All Rights Reserved
Powered by: CDS PVT LTD