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The sources of air pollutants are widely varied and include manmade and natural processes. For example, particles are emitted by manmade sources like diesel engines and smokestacks, and by natural sources such as volcanoes and windblown dust. Cows actually produce 80 million metric tons per year of methane , which can warm the planet and help form tropospheric ozone.
The Environmental Protection Agency posts Air Quality Index numbers to tell us how clean the air is in each part of the country each day. More information about this can be found at http://airnow.gov/index.cfm?action=aqibroch.index . In the Houston Chronicle, the weather page shows the ozone levels from the day before and a forecast of today’s ozone levels. Online, the Houston Chronicle has a “current air quality” map that you can click on. That takes you to an interactive map, where they can click on each monitor and see its meteorology and air pollution conditions. For the Westbury schools, the Bayland Park monitor (#13 in the bottom map) would be the closest to their campus. This map is available at http://weather.chron.com/US/TX/Houston.html.
The following AQI ranges correspond to certain ranges of ozone concentration in parts per billion (ppb). This can give students a sense of how their GLOBE ozone measurements (in ppb) relate to AQI levels, though technically the AQI is based on 8-hour averaged concentrations of ozone.
Air Quality Index | Ozone Concentration (ppb)* |
0-50 | 0-59 |
51-100 | 60-75 |
51-100 | 76-95 |
151-200 | 96-115 |
201-300 | 116-374 |
>300 | >374 |
The EPA provides reading material through Project A.I.R.E:
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