Home Technology Fact Check: No, NASA Did Not Predict Delhi-NCR Earthquake

Fact Check: No, NASA Did Not Predict Delhi-NCR Earthquake

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Fact Check: No, NASA Did Not Predict Delhi-NCR Earthquake


New Delhi: A fake message saying that the US space agency NASA predicted a strong earthquake in Delhi-NCR between April 7-15 became so viral in India that the fact-checking arm of the government had to intervene to deny any such prediction. Also Read – ‘Suicide he Kar Lein?’ Confused Netizens Ask After 3.5 Magnitude Earthquake Hits Delhi-NCR Amid COVID-19

But in a somewhat crazy coincidence, a mild-intensity earthquake measuring 3.4 on the Richter scale was felt in the national capital and its surrounding regions on Sunday evening. Also Read – ‘Hope Everyone is Safe’: Kejriwal Prays For Safety of All After Earthquake Hits Delhi

It was, however, not as strong as conveyed in the fake video which warned people of an earthquake of magnitude 9.1. Also Read – Earthquake in Delhi-NCR: Quake Measuring 3.5 on Richter Scale Hits National Capital, no Loss of Life or Property Reported

“According to NASA’s assessment, a strong earthquake is going to happen in Delhi. #PIBFactCheck: The video being viral is a reality analysis done by a news channel in 2018, according to which it is a #FakeNews. No such prediction has been made by NASA,” PIB fact-check team tweeted late on Saturday.

Before you think that if the fake message was, indeed, true, you must know that the exact time, place and magnitude of earthquakes cannot be predicted long before it occurs.

The United States Geological Survey, a scientific agency of the United States government, says on its website that “neither the USGS nor any other scientists have ever predicted a major earthquake.”

“We do not know how, and we do not expect to know how any time in the foreseeable future. USGS scientists can only calculate the probability that a significant earthquake will occur in a specific area within a certain number of years,” USGS said.

An earthquake prediction must define three elements — the date and time, the location, and the magnitude.

By this definition too, the prediction circulated on social media about the earthquake in Delhi turns out to be false.

Call it a crazy coincidence.


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