Open-path, closed-path, and reconstructed aerosol extinction at a rural site.
Timothy D GordonAnthony J PrenniJames R RenfroEthan McClureBill HicksTimothy B OnaschAndrew FreedmanGavin R McMeekingPing ChenPublished in: Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association (1995) (2018)
Although light extinction, which is directly related to visibility, is not directly measured in U.S. National Parks, existing IMPROVE protocols can be used to accurately infer visibility for average humidity conditions, but during the large fraction of the year when humidity is above or below average, accuracy is reduced substantially. Furthermore, nephelometers, which are used to assess the accuracy of IMPROVE visibility estimates, may themselves be biased low when humidity is very high. Despite reductions in organic and sulfate particles since the 1990s, hygroscopicity, particles' affinity for water, appears unchanged, although this conclusion is weakened by the previously mentioned nephelometer limitations.