Visibility-related sessions included visibility as an indicator of human health, human perception of visibility, and temporal trends in visibility. Monitoring of aerosols and haze were addressed in sessions on aerosol field studies and monitoring networks, satellite and remote-sensing applications to haze and aerosol monitoring, and new instruments and measurement techniques. As an important parallel, aerosol modeling activities were addressed in a session on modeling aerosols and visibility at local, regional, and global scales.
Sessions on the measurement and modeling of atmospheric nitrogen furthered our understanding on the link between visibility, ecology, and agricultural issues. Scientific advances in the understanding of carbonaceous aerosols were addressed in sessions on secondary organic aerosols and light absorbing carbon. In addition, a session on mineral dust highlighted its influence on air quality and visibility.
The conference was also an effective platform for addressing policy-related issues, with sessions on potential impacts of emissions from oil and gas fields on air quality and visibility, and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Regional Haze Rule (RHR). Two panels expanded on these topics: regional perspectives on the second planning period for regional haze state implementation plans, and air quality issues in the Western States Air Resources Council (WESTAR) region. Finally, a panel also addressed evolving issues in air quality related to a changing climate.
The papers included in this issue reflect the diverse and wide-ranging topics that were presented at the conference. We are grateful to the presenters and attendees at the specialty conference, the conference organizing committee, the authors who submitted their manuscripts, and the reviewers, editors, and support staff who worked to produce this issue. The complete final program for the conference can be found online at https://www.awma.org/Files/Publications/Visibility%202016%20Program%20Final.pdf and the proceedings can be found at http://proceedings.awma.org/Visibility2016/Vis2016.zip. This conference was the 10th in a series of visibility-related specialty conferences and we were honored to be involved. We look forward to seeing you at the next visibility specialty conference.
Acknowledgment
We extend a special thank you to our sponsors: Sunset, Aerosol Devices Inc., Air Resource Specialists, ARA Instruments, American ECOTECH, Magee Scientific, Met One Instruments Inc., and URG.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Jenny L. Hand
Jenny L. Hand is a research scientist at the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere at Colorado State University.
Delbert J. Eatough
Delbert J. Eatough is a professor of Chemistry, Emeritus, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, and Chair of the 2016 Visibility Conference.