Air quality turns ‘severe’; BJP requests L-G to intervene, call an all-party meeting
- December 20, 2022
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Air quality turns ‘severe’; BJP requests L-G to intervene, call an all-party meeting
Subject: Environment
Context:
- For the second day in a row, dense fog hit Delhi Tuesday morning with visibility falling sharply in parts of the city.
- Experts attributed the increase in the city’s AQI to meteorological factors.
Meteorological factors behind the dense fog in delhi:
- There is a radiative fog due to colder temperatures and higher relative humidity.
- This tends to increase the pollution level as particles are suspended with water molecules in the atmosphere.
- Additionally, mixing layer height is significantly low, restricting the vertical dispersion of pollutants, which also increases pollution.
Fog:
- When the temperature of an air mass containing a large quantity of water vapour falls all of a sudden, condensation takes place within itself on fine dust particles.
- During condensation, molecules of water vapor combine to make tiny liquid water droplets that hang in the air. One can see fog because of these tiny water droplets.
- So, the fog is a cloud with its base at or very near to the ground. Because of the fog and mist, the visibility becomes poor to zero.
Condition for fog formation:
- In order for fog to form, dust or some kind of air pollution needs to be in the air. Water vapor condenses around these microscopic solid particles.
- In urban and industrial centers smoke provides plenty of nuclei which help the formation of fog and mist.
- Such a condition when fog is mixed with smoke, is described as smog.
- Sea fog, which shows up near bodies of salty water, is formed as water vapor condenses around bits of salt.
- Depending on the humidity and temperature, fog can form very suddenly and then disappear just as quickly. This is called flash fog.
Types of fog:
- Radiation fog: It results from radiation, cooling of the ground and adjacent air. These fogs are not very thick. Usual in winters.
- Advectional fog: Fogs formed by condensation of warm air when it moves horizontally over a cold surface, are known as advectional fog.
- These fogs are thick and persistent.
- Occurs over warm and cold water mixing zones in oceans.
- Frontal or precipitation fog: It is produced due to convergence of warm and cold air masses where warm air mass is pushed under by the heavier cold air mass.
- Precipitation in the warm air mass condenses to produce fog at the boundary of the two air masses.
- Valley fog: It forms in mountain valleys, usually during winter. Valley fog develops when mountains prevent the dense air from escaping. The fog is trapped in the bowl of the valley.
- In 1930, vapor condensed around particles of air pollution in the Meuse Valley, Belgium. More than 60 people died as a result of this deadly valley fog.
- Freezing fog: It happens when the liquid fog droplets freeze to solid surfaces.
- Mountaintops that are covered by clouds are often covered in freezing fog. As the freezing fog lifts, the ground, the trees, and even objects like spider webs, are blanketed by a layer of frost.
- The white landscapes of freezing fog are common in places with cold, moist climates, such as Scandinavia or Antarctica.
Fog vs Mist:
- Fog is not the same thing as mist.
- Fog is denser than mist. This means fog is more massive and thicker than mist.
- There are more water molecules in the same amount of space in a fog.
- Fog cuts visibility down to one kilometer, meaning it will prevent you from seeing further away than one kilometer from where you’re standing.
- Mist can reduce visibility to between one and two kilometers.
Grand Banks, Newfoundland, Canada:
- The foggiest place in the world is Grand Banks, a spot in the Atlantic Ocean off the island of Newfoundland, Canada.
- The cold Labrador Current from the north and the warm Gulf Stream current from the east create prime conditions for thick fog to form almost every day.
Pea Souper:
- A “pea souper” is a type of fog that forms when water condenses around microscopic particles of coal.
- This fog is often a brownish-yellow color, leading to the name.
- Pea soupers are common in areas that burn coal for energy.
- The London Fog of 1952, which killed 12,000 people around the urban center of London, England, was a pea souper.
- The Great Fog led to legislation that regulated the coal industry and air pollution in the United Kingdom.