Top Banner
13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working) This quiz tests your understanding of how the ppb figure varies over time
24

13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Jan 18, 2016

Download

Documents

Margaret Hunter
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

13.58 parts per billionis the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in

Sheffield air

(all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014,

When monitor is working)

This quiz tests your understanding of how the ppb figure varies over time

Page 2: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Shows average NO2 by hour of day/night.What do you notice? What might cause this?

Page 3: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Previous question suggested that human behaviour (driving?) can effect NO2 levels.

One of the lines above is average NO2 for weekends,The other line is average NO2 for work days (Mon-Fri)

Which is which?

Page 4: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

The BLUE line is weekends

The RED line is Monday-Friday.

There is lower NO2 pollution levels at weekends.

Page 5: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Here are the average NO2 levels per hour, for each of the seven days

From what you know about week-day and weekends, suggest which days the ORANGE and the LIGHT BLUE lines represent.

Page 6: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Notice the clean(er) air effect of a lack of “rush hour” traffic on Sundays

Saturdays and Sundays do have afternoon peaks, but later in the afternoon than weekdays. What might be causing this?

Page 7: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

It isn’t just human activity that affects NO2 levels.Weather plays a big part too.

This graph shows the average NO2 level for different sets of air temperature.

What does the graph tell you about how NO2 levels vary with temperature?

Page 8: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

From the previous graph you should expect that WARMER DAYS have LOWER LEVELS of NO2 pollution.

Here (again) is the graph showing average levels of pollution.This graph is for all days that the monitor was working.

Sketch on the screen what line you would expect for a typical summer day

Page 9: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Is this what you sketched.

The blue line is the average for all days in the yearThe green line is the average for JUNE (summer) days only.

How much lower are the green readings?

Page 10: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

The opposite is also trueCOLDER DAYS typically have HIGHER LEVELS of NO2 pollution.

Again sketch on the screen, this time for what line you would expect for a typical winter day

Page 11: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

This is what the monitor found

The blue line is the average for all days in the yearThe red line is the average for JANUARY (winter) days only.

The early morning values are the same. But from breakfast onwards, the values are 5 ppb higher most of the day.

Page 12: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Temperature is not the only thing that affects NO2 levels.Dampness in the air retains NO2 longer.

Which of these three graphs is the correct one for showing that HIGH HUMIDITY typically relates to HIGHER NO2?

Page 13: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

The correct graph for HIGH HUMIDITY HIGHER NO2 is shown above

(But .... On very dry sunny days the NO2 breaks down into Ozone, which is a pollutant with different nasty effects. So extremely low humidity isn’t good for clean air either)

Page 14: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Air Pressure has complicated link to NO2 levels.We won’t go into the detailed explanation.

But what is the main observation from this graph.

Page 15: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Wind Speed also has an affect on pollution levels.

For our monitor, it recorded worse NO2 levels on windless days.On windy days the pollution blows somewhere else

But then some area would get higher pollution on higher wind days! So the effect of wind and pollution is different for each local situation.

Page 16: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

From the previous slides, which of the following are (for our monitor) associated with HIGH NO2?

Warm or Cold days?Dry or Humid air?Windy or Still days?

High Pressure or Low Pressure?

See what you can remember from the slides so far

Page 17: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

In Sheffield there were 11 days during 2010-2014 when whether was particularly

COLDDAMP (humid)

STILLHIGH PRESSURE

Look at the dates.What time of year were these?Are the NO2 levels more than

the average of 13.95 ppb?

Page 18: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Now look at the hour-by-hour readings for these 11 days of cold/damp/still/pressured air.

How many of the individual readings are above average of 13.95 ?What is the longest sequence of hours where air quality was poor?

Page 19: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

The answers are:• EVERY reading within those conditions are high.• The longest sequence was 3pm 13th Jan 2010, to 4am the

following day ..... 13 hours.

What is the effect on human health of 13 hours of bad air?

Page 20: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

EU Directive on NO2 levels

• http://www.brentwood.gov.uk/pdf/pdf_869.pdf

Page 21: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Sheffield :

10 days in 2010-2014 where the whole-day average exceeded 40 ppb

The worst full-day average was 75.69 ppb.

Page 22: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Sheffield :

But there were 37 days when just between 6pm – 7pm (evening rush hour) the levels were “unsafe”

What was the worst reading in this time?

Page 23: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Overall there were • 78 days with at least one hour of ‘unsafe’ levels• out of the 1313 days when the monitor reported data

What percentage is 78 out of 1313

(a) 1% (b) 6% (c) 13% (d) 20%

Page 24: 13.58 parts per billion is the average for Nitrogen Dioxide (NO2) in Sheffield air (all readings, all times of day/night 2010-2014, When monitor is working)

Answer • 78 days with at least one hour of ‘unsafe’ levels

• out of the 1313 days when the monitor reported data is

6% What do YOU think?

Are you happy that 6% of days in Sheffield have ‘unsafe’ levels of NO2 for at least part of the day?