Purple Air may have changed the reporting they do or I might have accidentally hit on a different report. Anyhow, I only reported on the particulate matter I normally do.
Odd how the 1.0 micron particulate matter concentration was so high. I now we have had fires recently, I wonder if they are the source. At least the 2.5 micron particulate matter wasn't dangerously concentrated.
Sunday was off and on clouds. So the photometer recorded the sun drifting in and out of clouds all day. Notice the funny spikiness between noon and 2:00 PM, for example.
We had low level haze and clouds that limited visibility on Sunday morning. Visibility was greater than 30 miles and barely 50 miles. However, it was only mountain tops that were visible 50 miles away (and barely at that).
The worst of the inversion has broken, but we still have unhealthy air. Our diurnal temperature variation is reduced this week. I need to make sure there isn't a problem with the sensor.
A sunny day until 12:00 to 14:00 hours. Low sun elevation and therefore, not very intense sunlight compared to summer. Also, the photometer shows the daylight hours are shorter now than they were in summer.
Our night-time lows are dropping below freezing. As a result, the relative humidity is reaching 100%. Over 24 hours, the air temperature dropped by roughly 10 degrees Fahrenheit.
It rained and snowed (lightly). So a rather cool and damp day on Sunday. The datalogger shows just how damp it got. The temperature actually rose slightly through out the day.
The air temperature held steady for most of the month as did the relative humidity. The ground temperature reached its peak as the intensity of sunlight continues to decrease. We experienced high air pressure early in the month, but it decreased closer to the end of the month.
The air quality has been in the good category for the majority of the week. There were three instances of the air quality getting into the unhealthy category. However, they were brief.