Inside the 13 news weather lab

July 2008
S M T W T F S
   
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
   

Categories

More WVEC Blogs

Saturday Evening Smoke Update - And a New Weather Term - SUPERFOG!

4:03 PM Sat, Jul 05, 2008 |

An update on the wind and smoke in Hampton Roads.

Light southerly flow will continue tonight and Sunday so smoke will continue to affect much of metro Norfolk/Portsmouth and outlying areas. High relative humidity overnight and early Sunday morning will have potential for a smoke/superfog scenario. Winds should allow for some Improvement again by midday Sunday.

For you trivia buffs/science geeks (like me - I use that term with all the affection in the world...)

From: http://ams.confex.com/ams/FIRE2003/techprogram/paper_65921.htm

On the origins of "Superfog"--a combination of smoke and water vapor that produces zero visibility over roadways

Gary L. Achtemeier, USDA Forest Service, Athens, GA

Forest and agricultural burning release chemical compounds and particulate matter into the atmosphere. Although most of this material contributes to visibility reductions through haze and provides chemical constituents available for reactions with other atmospheric pollutants, there are occasions when smoke is entrapped locally and combines with water vapor to produce zero visibility smoke/fog or superfog. Superfog threatens transportation when it drifts over roadways - a problem in the South, especially at night. In 1997, a project to measure smoke moving along the ground at night included a small prescribed burn that produced superfog. Then, in 2001, ground photographs of superfog were taken at the edge of a prescribed burn during daytime. These observations made possible the development of two new hypotheses for superfog formation. One of these hypotheses, the moisture excess hypothesis, is the subject of this paper. Measurements of relative humidity and temperature in smoke from smoldering fuels support the hypothesis that moisture boiled from smoldering fuels may be a greater contributor to superfog than hygroscopic nuclei in the smoke.




Leave a comment





Type the characters you see in the picture above.