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Effects of Pollution on Visibility and the Earth’s Radiation Balance. John G. Watson (john.watson@dri.edu) Judith C. Chow Desert Research Institute Reno, NV, USA Presented at: The Workshop on Air Quality Management, Measurement, Modeling, and Health Effects
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Effects of Pollution on Visibility and the Earth’s Radiation Balance John G. Watson (john.watson@dri.edu) Judith C. Chow Desert Research Institute Reno, NV, USA Presented at: The Workshop on Air Quality Management, Measurement, Modeling, and Health Effects University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia 24 May 2007
Based on a Critical Review of Science and Policy Interaction (www.awma.org)
High uncertainties for aerosol effects on global radiation balanceIPCC (2001)
Many aerosol effects are common for visibility and climate change
Questions • What is poor visibility or “haze”? • Why is visibility important? • What causes haze? • How is haze quantified? • How can haze be measured? • How can visibility be improved?
What is haze? • Haze is the visually perceived degradation of humanly appreciated views caused by polluting particles and gases.
Regional Haze (Not directly attributable to a single source)
Poor and Natural Visibility at the Grand CanyonWINHAZE (webcam.srs.fs.fed.us/winhaze.htm)
The human eye is more sensitive to sharp changes in constrast
Why is haze important? • Poor visibility is the most publicly accessible indicator of air pollution. • Haze is associated with adverse pollution levels that affect public health. • Tourists and homeowners pay much for highly prized views. • The same pollutants that affect haze also affect global radiation balance.
What causes haze? • Particles and gases that remove light from a sight path and scatter light into a sight path, thereby obscuring the contrast of a target with background air.
How is haze quantified?Visibility Metrics • Perceived visual air quality: What people think they see. • Light extinction (bext), I(x)/I(0) = e-bextx • Contrast=I(x)target/I(x)background • Visual range (VR=4/bext or furthest observed distance) • Spatial frequency (Modulation Transfer Function) • Δbext=4/x • Deciview (dv=10ln(bext/10) [I(x)=light intensity at distance x from target]
How is haze quantified?Other considerations • Long-term averages (e.g., annual, seasonal). • Averages of highest and lowest values (e.g., poorest 20%, lowest 20%). • Frequencies above a threshold. • Willingness to pay or be paid.
How can haze be measured? • Human observations – viewing targets at various distances • Photographs – measuring distance to targets or visual enjoyment • Contrast transmittance – teleradiometers measure intensity of target and background) • Sight path extinction – transmissometers measure light removed from a path • Point extinction – nephelometers for particle scattering, aethalometers for particle absorption, NOx analyzer for gas absorption, elevation for clear air scattering • Chemical extinction – weighted sum of major chemical components in fine and coarse particles
Nephelometers for particle light scattering Optec NGN-2 measures wet (total) particle scattering Radiance R903 with smart heater measures dry particle scattering
Chemical extinctionBattery-powered minivol PM2.5/PM10 sampler AirMetrics impactors PM10 PM2.5 Sampler Configuration in Tong Liang, China
Chemical Extinction bext (Mm-1)= Σdry extinction efficiency (m2/g) x humidity multiplier x species concentration (µg/m3) = 3 x f(RH) x (NH4)2SO4 + 3 x f(RH) x NH4NO3 + 4 x Organics + 10 x Soot + 1 x Soil + 0.6 x Coarse Mass + 10 (Clear Air Scattering) f(RH)=extinction efficiency increase with RH dv=10ln(bext/10)
Extinction efficiencies assume size distribution, pure substances, and spherical particles
Scattering efficiency depends on RH, assuming an initial size distribution. High RH measurements are inaccurate
How can visibility be improved? • Quantify where and when poor visibility occurs • Measure PM2.5 chemical components • Determine sources of PM2.5 components • Separate natural from manmade contributions • Reduce emissions from manmade emitters
US Regional Haze Rule • Sets ten year goals along line between baseline and “natural visibility conditions” • Uses IMPROVE aerosol measurements to monitor progress • Attains natural visibility conditions by 2065 • Uses deciview as indicator of haze • Uses 2000-2004 as baseline • Allows Regional Planning Organizations (RPOs) to develop regional emissions strategies (e.g., emissions trading)
Chemical Contributions to ExtinctionAverage of Highest 20% bext, 1995-1999
How can haze be improved? • Technology-based emissions limitations • Ambient standards • Air quality maintenance • Regional emissions caps and trading zones • Goals and demonstration of reasonable progress
Natural emitters (Asian dust and wildfires) affect visibility as well as manmade sources
Conclusions • Haze is the most publicly accessible evidence of air pollution • Poor visibility is related to all other pollution problems • Haze is best quantified in terms of contributions from different types of pollution • Progress is tracked through long-term measurements • Much of our current knowledge of regional haze comes from PM monitoring with chemical speciation and special studies within its framework • Each of the aerosol components can be quantified reasonably accurately, with the exception of organic and elemental carbon • Haze improvements will result in general emission reductions that also mitigate against global warming