Abstract

In the present study, winter fog events (Nov. 2017–Feb. 2018) in Amritsar city were compared with other major cities of North India. Multivariate data analysis, along with air mass trajectory analysis, was used to explain the complex behaviour of ambient air quality during winter fog. Average particulate matter (PM) during fog events was PM2.5 (77 μg m−3), PM10 (162 μg m−3) above the 24 h average National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) of PM2.5 (60 μg m−3) and PM10 (100 μg m−3), respectively prescribed by Government of India. Wind speed and visibility during fog events were studied along with prevailing wind direction for major PM episodes. Amritsar’s PM2.5 comparison with Ludhiana, Delhi, Kanpur, Lucknow, and Jaipur showed a clear link between Amritsar with Ludhiana (r = 0.807), a North Indian industrial hub. Lucknow and Kanpur had a strong correlation (r = 0.826) due to their proximity. Box-plot of PM2.5 to PM10 ratio revealed a lower contribution of PM2.5 in Amritsar as compared to other cities. Dimensionality reduction using factor analysis of ambient air quality and meteorological parameters grouped the data in order of their variance explained. The first principal component (PC-1) was PM2.5 and PM10, followed by an antagonist correlation of humidity with wind velocity and visibility in Amritsar city. Factor analysis of ambient air quality of six cities, grouped Delhi, Kanpur, and Lucknow into PC-1, followed by Ludhiana and Amritsar as PC-2 which could be due to their proximity signifying the similar ambient air quality of the sites. In order to determine the origin of air mass, 24 h backward trajectories were studied and corroborated with wind rose profile. The results revealed the transport of air masses from the west to the source location.

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