PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Air pollution fell sharply during lockdown

Traffic significantly underestimated as cause of nitrogen oxide pollution in cities

Air pollution fell sharply during lockdown
2021-03-04
(Press-News.org) The far-reaching mobility restrictions at the beginning of the Corona pandemic in March 2020 created a unique situation for atmospheric sciences: "During the 2020 lockdown, we were able to directly investigate the actual effects of drastic traffic restrictions on the distribution of air pollutants and on the emission of climate gases," says Innsbruck atmospheric scientist Thomas Karl. With his team, he has now published a detailed analysis of air quality during the first lockdown in the city of Innsbruck, Austria, in the journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics. "We find significantly greater decreases of air pollutants than of carbon dioxide, for example," the researcher says, summarizing the results. In the past year, some studies showed contradicting results because the influence of weather was often not factored in, on the one hand, or a detailed comparison with emission data was not possible, on the other hand. Based on a unique measurement strategy in combination with detailed source emission data, the Innsbruck researchers can now provide a reliable analysis. Their results confirm assumptions inferred from earlier work: "The decrease in nitrogen oxides and other pollutants due to reduced traffic is stronger than often assumed," emphasizes Thomas Karl. "We find that the proportion of nitrogen oxides emitted from traffic is higher than often assumed, while the proportion from domestic, commercial and public energy consumption is lower." The European energy transition, with the switch to cleaner combustion in the residential and industrial sectors, is having a positive effect on air quality and has been underestimated in some cases. Atmospheric researcher Thomas Karl summarizes "We project that in many European inner cities, comparable to Innsbruck, more than 90 percent of nitrogen oxide emissions are caused by traffic".

Emission models need to be adjusted

In urban regions across Europe, the air quality thresholds for nitrogen oxides and other pollutants are regularly exceeded. It is not always easy to determine which polluters are responsible for how much emission. Until recently, the key method for quantifying emissions has relied on exhaust emission tests on test stands that were then extrapolated in a model. However, the actual amount of air pollutants emitted by a vehicle or a heating appliance in everyday use can depend on many factors. The diesel scandal has made it clear how inconclusive measurements on the test stand can be, when interpreting their impact on the environment. Assessment of air management by environmental and health authorities heavily depends on atmospheric models that rely on accurate emission data. Until now, it was very difficult to assess actual air pollutants emitted in a specific region and constraining their emissions. The team led by Thomas Karl from the Department of Atmospheric and Cryospheric Sciences at the University of Innsbruck closes this gap with the so-called eddy covariance method, which measures air composition and wind flow in detail and thus allows conclusions to be drawn about the air pollutant emission strengths. With the Innsbruck Atmospheric Observatory (IAO) set up at the University of Innsbruck, the air over Innsbruck is now being continuously studied.

INFORMATION:

The current study was financed by the Austrian Science Fund FWF.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Air pollution fell sharply during lockdown

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New microcomb could help discover exoplanets and detect diseases

New microcomb could help discover exoplanets and detect diseases
2021-03-04
Tiny photonic devices could be used to find new exoplanets, monitor our health, and make the internet more energy efficient. Researchers from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, now present a game changing microcomb that could bring advanced applications closer to reality. A microcomb is a photonic device capable of generating a myriad of optical frequencies - colours - on a tiny cavity known as microresonator. These colours are uniformly distributed so the microcomb behaves like a 'ruler made of light'. The device can be used to measure or generate frequencies with extreme precision. In a recent article in the journal ...

Research contributes to understanding of hypersonic flow

Research contributes to understanding of hypersonic flow
2021-03-04
Using data collected in a NASA Langley Mach 6 wind tunnel, researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign replicated the hypersonic flow conditions of a compression ramp flow by means of Direct Numerical Simulation. The simulation yielded an abundance of additional data, which can be used to better understand the phenomena that occur surrounding vehicles traveling at hypersonic speeds. "Data from experiments are somewhat limited--for example taken from pressure probes at a few locations on a test object. When we run a numerical simulation, we acquire information - such as pressure, temperature, ...

Rapid test for respiratory infections liked by GPs and may reduce antibiotic prescribing

2021-03-04
A rapid microbiological point-of-care test to diagnose respiratory infections has proved popular with GPs and could reduce antibiotic prescribing in primary care, according to a National Institute for Health Research funded study by researchers at the Centre for Academic Primary Care, University of Bristol. There are high rates of antibiotic prescribing in primary care and the UK government has called for the introduction of rapid diagnostics to curb overuse. The RAPID-TEST study, published in the journal Family Practice today [4 March] evaluated ...

Researchers reveal process behind harmful glial cell change in motor neurone disease

2021-03-04
Scientists at the Francis Crick Institute and UCL have identified the trigger of a key cellular change in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a type of motor neurone disease. The findings could help develop new treatments for many neurological diseases with the same change, including Parkinson's and Alzheimer's. When the nervous system is injured, diseased or infected, star-shaped cells, called astrocytes, undergo 'reactive' changes in their behaviour. Whilst some of these reactive astrocytes become protective, others become harmful and damage surrounding motor neurons. Reactive astrocytes are observed in various neurodegenerative diseases including ALS, but there is a lack of understanding about what causes astrocytes to ...

Charity's pharma investments raise questions around transparency and accountability

2021-03-04
The Wellcome Trust, one of the world's top funders of health research, stands to gain financially from the covid-19 pandemic, raising questions about transparency and accountability, reports The BMJ today. Independent journalist Tim Schwab shows how the charity plays a leading role in a WHO programme to support new covid-19 therapeutics, while holding investments in companies producing these same treatments. It follows news reports that another charity, the Gates Foundation, is also positioned to potentially benefit financially from its leading role in the pandemic response. Financial disclosures from late 2020 show that Wellcome has a £275m stake in Novartis, which manufactures dexamethasone, and a £252m ...

The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health: First global study of pandemic's impact on childhood cancer care reveals worldwide effects

2021-03-04
More than three quarters (78%) of hospitals surveyed between June and August 2020 reported that their paediatric cancer care had been affected by the pandemic. Almost half (43%) made fewer new cancer diagnoses than expected, while around one third (34%) noted a rise in the number of patients abandoning treatment. Nearly one in ten (7%) closed their paediatric cancer units completely at some stage during the pandemic. Hospitals in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) were disproportionately affected, with unavailability of chemotherapy, treatment abandonment, and disrupted radiotherapy among issues more frequently reported. The COVID-19 pandemic has had major impacts on childhood cancer care worldwide, ...

Albumin provides no benefit to hospitalized patients with advanced liver disease

2021-03-04
Daily infusions of albumin provide no significant health benefit to patients hospitalised with advanced liver disease, over and above 'standard care', finds a large-scale multicentre trial led by UCL researchers. Albumin is a protein made in the liver that prevents fluid leaking from the bloodstream to other body tissues and carries various substances throughout the body, such as hormones or enzymes. In people with liver disease, low albumin levels are associated with an increased risk of death among hospitalised patients who have cirrhosis, and laboratory studies have shown albumin to have an anti-inflammatory effect. Therefore, albumin infusions are considered the best fluid for patients with cirrhosis and are an integral part of clinical care. Explaining the ATTIRE* trial, Principal ...

Researchers urge greater awareness of delayed skin reactions to Moderna COVID-19 vaccine

Researchers urge greater awareness of delayed skin reactions to Moderna COVID-19 vaccine
2021-03-04
BOSTON - As the speed and scale of vaccinations against the SARS-CoV-2 virus ramps up globally, researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) are calling for greater awareness and communication around a delayed injection-site reaction that can occur in some patients who have received the Moderna mRNA-1273 vaccine. In a letter to the editor published online in The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), the authors note Phase 3 clinical data from the Moderna vaccine trial did show delayed skin hypersensitivity in a small number of the more than 30,000 trial participants. However, the authors say the large, red, sometimes raised, itchy or painful skin reactions were never fully characterized ...

Gender assumptions harm progress on climate adaption and resilience

Gender assumptions harm progress on climate adaption and resilience
2021-03-04
Scientists say outdated assumptions around gender continue to hinder effective and fair policymaking and action for climate mitigation and adaptation. Lead author of a new study, Dr Jacqueline Lau from the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook University (Coral CoE at JCU) and WorldFish, said gender--alongside other identities like race, class and age--has a powerful influence on people's experience of, and resilience to, climate change. She said the four most common and interlinked assumptions found are: women are innately caring and connected to the environment; women are a homogenous and vulnerable group; gender equality is a women's issue and; gender equality ...

Neuroimaging reveals how ideology affects race perception

2021-03-03
ITHACA, N.Y. - How might people's political ideology affect their perception of race? Previous research by Amy Krosch, assistant professor of psychology in the College of Arts and Sciences, has shown that white people who identify themselves as political conservatives tend to have a lower threshold for seeing mixed-race Black and white faces as Black. More often than liberals, Krosch found, white political conservatives show a form of social discrimination termed "hypodescent" - categorizing multiracial individuals as members of the "socially subordinate" racial group. In new research published Feb. 22 in Philosophical Transactions of Royal Society B, Krosch used neuroimaging to show that this effect seems to be driven by white ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Nearly one in ten unsure if they have Long Covid

Scientists unlock new dimension in light manipulation, ushering a new era in photonic technology

Current antivirals likely less effective against severe infection caused by bird flu virus in cows’ milk

Lassa fever vaccine enters phase 1 clinical trial

Institute for Healthcare Improvement Honors Hebrew SeniorLife’s Orchard Cove and NewBridge on the Charles

Dialing in the temperature needed for precise nuclear timekeeping

Fewer than half of Medicaid managed care plans provide all FDA-approved medications for alcohol use disorder

Mount Sinai researchers specific therapy that teaches patients to tolerate stomach and body discomfort improved functional brain deficits linked to visceral disgust that can cause of food avoidance in

New ACP guideline recommends combination therapy for acute episodic migraines

Last supper of 15-million-year-old freshwater fish

Slow, silent ‘scream’ of epithelial cells detected for first time

How big brains and flexible skulls led to the evolution of modern birds

Iguanas floated one-fifth of the way around the world to colonize Fiji

‘Audible enclaves’ could enable private listening without headphones

Twisting atomically thin materials could advance quantum computers

Impaired gastric myoelectrical rhythms associated with altered autonomic functions in patients with severe ischemic stroke

American College of Cardiology issues concise clinical guidance on evaluation and management of cardiogenic shock

Psychological prehabilitation improves surgical recovery, study finds

Neighborhood dispute among cells: Whichever successfully exerts force wins

Deadline extended for the fifth edition of the SWIM Award for Science Journalism

Unique dove species is the dodo of the Caribbean and in similar danger of dying out

Free University Brussels (VUB) opens its doors to censored American researchers

Neuroanatomy that sets humans apart from other primates

Stress and sex influence traumatic brain injury outcomes

Study: suppressing key protein may unlock immunotherapy for Glioblastoma

Early surgical intervention in children with sleep-disordered breathing reduces need for doctor visits, prescriptions

Statin use and risk of hepatocellular carcinoma and liver fibrosis in chronic liver disease

Gender-affirming hormone therapy and depressive symptoms among transgender adults

Surgery in kids with mild sleep-disordered breathing tied to fewer doctor visits, meds

Magnetic microalgae on a mission to become robots

[Press-News.org] Air pollution fell sharply during lockdown
Traffic significantly underestimated as cause of nitrogen oxide pollution in cities