Smoke Forest fire In Southern Europe The Britain has brought blurred terms, Disrupt the current heatwaveThe forecasts have said.
Britain experienced Fourth summer heatwave this weekThe mercury with some areas sees climbing above 33C in the hottest places.
Although, Meteorological Office Said “smoke from wildfire Spain And PortugalPlus Saharan Dust is swept away in Britain ”.
This means that the UK should expect that in the coming days “extended sunset and sunrise – thanks to the shatter of dark red and orange light,” said the forecaster.
Scientists say that this incident is associated with two processes known as the rally and mai disintegration.
According to Royal Meteorological Society, due to small air molecules, due to small wind molecules, the sky usually appears to be blue wavelength of light, such as violet and blue.
But large particles released by the wildfire, such as soot and ash, trigger mai scattering, scattering all wavelengths more equally and allowing long and orange wavelength to dominate for a long time.
Met office meteorologist Greg Dehrest told Sky News the Hauz that “will roam around for the next few days”.
The forecast of the Met Office for Sunday says that the low clouds that retract towards the North Sea means “too much sunny for most”. There will be strong winds in the southwest of England, and it will remain warm along the east coast.
Spain fought with 14 major fire -operated fire and increased from the heat on Friday as the authorities warned of “adverse conditions” to deal with the flames that have already killed seven people and one area has burnt the size of London.
In one of the worst summer for wildfires in 20 years, firefighting is struggling to remove the blazes in southern Europe.
An early two -week heatwave and southern winds worsened the situation in Spain, Virginia Barkon, Director General of Emergency Services, said.
According to the European Union’s Forest Fire Information Service, this year the Wildfire in Spain has burnt more than 157,000 hectares in Spain.
Meanwhile, in the neighboring Portugal, thousands of firefightings were struggling with five major blasts in the central and northern parts of the country, with a fire in Trancoso, some 350 km north -north of the lisbon, now fierce for six days.
According to the European Union’s Copernicus climate change service, Europe has been twice as hot as the global average since the 1980s.
The European Union’s monitoring agency says that 2024 was the hottest year on the record both globally and in Europe, which experienced its second largest number of ‘heat stress’ days.