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ABOUT MAXIMUM DAILY OZONE IN SAN DIEGO

Ozone (O3) is a compound of oxygen found both high in the stratosphere (the "good" ozone blocking harmful ultraviolet radiation) and low in the troposphere (the "bad" ozone that is the main part of photochemical smog). Ozone is a potential harmful chemical to humans, as it will interfere with the respiration, even at very low concentrations. Ozone causes inflammation of airways that can reduce lung capacity, and can result in permanent damage to lung tissue. The EPA has established a federal standard for ozone concentration in the lower atmosphere at .12 ppm (average concentration over 1 hour).

Air samples taken on Overland Avenue in downtown San Diego during June, July and August of 1998 were analyzed for ozone and compiled by the California Air Resources Board (CARB). The data were reported in several different fashions. Maximum daily concentration of ozone measured over a 1 hour period are given in the table and shown in the diagram.

The data can be displayed and analyzed using a histogram, which shows a skew symmetric distribution of maximum ozone values measured on 70 different days during the summer of 1998 in San Diego. Skew symmetric distributions are quite useful in illustrating to the student the differences between the mean, median and mode. The mean ozone maximum is much lower than the federal standard, however there was one day in August when the EPA standard was exceeded.

The choice of graphical representation can obscure or illuminate the data; students should learn that graphs are no substitute for the original data. Is there some way of graphically representing this data set to "hide" the one value that exceeds the federal standard?

Variables:

date- date

day- day in number

ozone- ozone in ppm

Link To Google Sheets:

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References/Notes/Attributions:

Reference: Data were obtained from CARB's wonderful website, which is a very valuable resource for educators. Look under Air Quality Data: http://www.arb.ca.gov/html/aqe&m.htm

See also the South Coast Air Quality Monitoring District website for southern California: http://www.aqmd.gov

Langkamp, G. and Hull, J., 2022. QELP Data Set 005. [online] Seattlecentral.edu. Available at: <https://seattlecentral.edu/qelp/sets/005/005.html> [Accessed 27 July 2022].

R Dataset Upload:

Use the following R code to directly access this dataset in R.

d <- read.csv("https://www.key2stats.com/San_Diego_Ozone_1672.csv")

R Coding Interface:


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