Spatiotemporal Aspects of Real-Time PM2.5: Low- and Middle-Income Neighborhoods in Bangalore, India

2011 
We measured outdoor fine particulate matter (PM2.5) concentrations in a low- and a nearby middle-income neighborhood in Bangalore, India. Each neighborhood included sampling locations near and not near a major road. One-minute average concentrations were recorded for 168 days during September 2008 to May 2009 using a gravimetric-corrected nephelometer. We also measured wind speed and direction, and PM2.5 concentration as a function of distance from road. Average concentrations are 21–46% higher in the low- than in the middle-income neighborhood, and exhibit differing spatiotemporal patterns. For example, in the middle-income neighborhood, median concentrations are higher near-road than not near-road (56 versus 50 μg m–3); in the low-income neighborhood, the reverse holds (68 μg m–3 near-road, 74 μg m–3 not near-road), likely because of within-neighborhood residential emissions (e.g., cooking; trash combustion). A moving-average subtraction method used to infer local- versus urban-scale emissions confirms ...
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