2017
DOI: 10.3390/atmos8040076
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A New Type of Haze? The December 2015 Purple (Magenta) Haze Event in Nanjing, China

Abstract: A special and unusual purple (magenta) haze episode was observed in Nanjing, China, at 17:00 on 22 December 2015. Many local and national news outlets reported this event. Based on an analysis of the pollution features and meteorological factors, including boundary layer characteristics, we concluded that this haze event was similar in most respects to other local haze episodes. We discuss the reasons and the possibilities about this rare color haze at the end of the paper. One way to attain a combination of b… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…In particular, at 21:00 BT on 4 December, the hourly concentration of PM 2.5 was up to 764 μg·m −3 , about 1-2 times higher than the other fog or haze events reported [44,45]. e situation was not improved until the midnight of 4 December, due to precipitation before the next fog occurrence.…”
Section: Heavy Pollutionmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…In particular, at 21:00 BT on 4 December, the hourly concentration of PM 2.5 was up to 764 μg·m −3 , about 1-2 times higher than the other fog or haze events reported [44,45]. e situation was not improved until the midnight of 4 December, due to precipitation before the next fog occurrence.…”
Section: Heavy Pollutionmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Combined with the vertical profiles of the temperature (Figure 7b), it could be inferred that the temperature inversion layer formed between 500 and 600 m AGL. In most cases, the temperature inversion layers formed during a pollution event could restrain convection and favor the accumulation of particulate matter, thereby inhibiting the vertical diffusion of PM 2.5 [34]. Flights A3 and A4 also exhibited relative homogeneity in the PM 2.5 mass concentration as the altitude increased below 600 m AGL, and the intensity of the temperature inversion layer remained stable and strong.…”
Section: Flight Measurement Featuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The experiment proved that the system could provide a reliable prediction. Liu et al [11,12] analyzed the fuchsia haze events in Nanjing in 2017. Singh, V. et al [13] proposed a method based on co-kriging to predict air pollution.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%