Close Menu
Technology Mag

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot
    LG officially enters the art TV category with the Gallery TV

    LG officially enters the art TV category with the Gallery TV

    December 29, 2025
    How to tweak your online platform algorithms

    How to tweak your online platform algorithms

    December 29, 2025
    Windows on Arm had another good year

    Windows on Arm had another good year

    December 29, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Subscribe
    Technology Mag
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • News
    • Business
    • Games
    • Gear
    • Reviews
    • Science
    • Security
    • Trending
    • Press Release
    Technology Mag
    Home » Your Outdoor Air Quality Monitor Could Lead to Safer Air for Everyone
    Gear

    Your Outdoor Air Quality Monitor Could Lead to Safer Air for Everyone

    News RoomBy News RoomAugust 9, 20255 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Your Outdoor Air Quality Monitor Could Lead to Safer Air for Everyone

    It wasn’t that long ago that few people were monitoring the air—not the government, not its citizens. Today, weather apps provide estimates of outdoor air quality, and the government’s own air quality monitoring website, AirNow, has an easy-to-use zip code portal and fire and smoke map.

    There are real health benefits to owning an air quality monitor. Each US state is responsible for developing its own monitoring plan. Even in densely populated urban areas, outdoor air monitors owned by federal, state, and local jurisdictions might be geographically spread out, leaving monitoring gaps that don’t accurately capture the air quality beyond one’s front door.

    Photograph: Lisa Wood Shapiro

    Outdoor air quality monitors are not just for understanding the air quality when the odor of smoke fills your home—an outdoor monitor can keep you informed. America has been in the air quality monitoring business for less than a century. In the not-so-distant past, citizens died due to unregulated and unchecked air.

    Once more, Trump’s EPA is seeking to weaken current Air Quality Index standards, the numbers that decide what is good, moderate, or unhealthy air, along with repealing the regulations on emissions of greenhouse gases. Those actions will lead to dirtier air and less reliable data. Like face masks and air purifiers, an outdoor air quality monitor is no longer a niche appliance but an electronic canary in the modern coal mine of a bad-air world.

    Purple Air Zen, a white air quality monitor with glowing green ring light around the edge, sitting outside on a windowsill beside potted plants

    Photograph: Lisa Wood Shapiro

    Back in January, I woke up to find my PurpleAir Zen outdoor air quality monitor glowing bright red. This happened over several days, and I was confused because the numbers were well over 100 and yet there wasn’t an air quality alert for the area.

    The annual AQI for my neighborhood is under 50—considered good air. For context, an AQI of 100 or more is unhealthy for sensitive groups, and an AQI of 150 is unhealthy for everyone. I mentioned the unhealthy air to a friend who reminded me that New York City recently installed a concrete recycling center a few blocks from my home. The literal dust-up the center caused, including failure to inform the neighborhood about its existence, might be the culprit for the recent uptick in bad air, from the concrete dust created by the recycling center. At that point the recycling center had yet to implement irrigation to mitigate the dust plumes. The data from my outdoor monitor fed into PurpleAir’s crowdsourced real-time map. On the map, I could see other nearby PurpleAir monitors, and the ones closest to the concrete recycling center tended to have worse air quality.

    Invisible Danger

    In July, after a year of mounting protests and political pressure, the city announced that it would relocate the concrete recycling center. What would have happened if residents hadn’t seen the dust clouds or noticed the gray film collecting on their cars? What if they couldn’t see what was all around them? PM 2.5 is the invisible solids and liquids that are in the air. The tiniest form can enter the deepest parts of the lungs, passing into the bloodstream. There, they can cause a host of illnesses, respiratory distress, and cardiovascular disease.

    Image may contain: Adapter, Electronics, and Furniture

    Photograph: Lisa Wood Shapiro

    IQAir

    Outdoor Air Quality Monitor

    In early 2024, the Biden administration strengthened the National Ambient Air Quality Health Standards (NAAQS) for particulate matter, a move that set “the level of the primary (health-based) annual PM 2.5 standard at 9.0 micrograms per cubic meter (µg/m3) to reflect new science on harms caused by particle pollution.” This changed the window of what is considered “good” air on the Air Quality Index.

    Those EPA guidelines are almost double those of the World Health Organization guidelines, which are a stricter 5 PM 2.5. Trump’s EPA is reconsidering the Biden administration’s PM 2.5 standards. To quote EPA administrator Zeldin, “All Americans deserve to breathe clean air while pursuing the American dream. Under President Trump, we will ensure air quality standards for particulate matter are protective of human health and the environment while we unleash the Golden Age of American prosperity.”

    The Trump administration also wants to repeal greenhouse gas emissions regulations. According to a statement from the EPA, “The EPA is further proposing to make a finding that GHG emissions from fossil fuel-fired power plants do not contribute significantly to dangerous air pollution.” Scientific research states otherwise. And so, as outdoor air becomes less regulated, it has the potential to get dirtier and make people sick.

    Too Close to Home

    This past spring, the smell of campfire filled my home. I peered out my fourth-floor window to see my neighbor’s illegal fire pit three backyards over. I watched the colors on my PurpleAir Zen outdoor monitor change from green to yellow to crimson over the course of an hour. When I logged onto the crowd-sourced PurpleAir real-time map, I could see that my outdoor air quality was an unhealthy 160 PM 2.5 and that a few blocks away, air quality was good at under 30 PM 2.5. There’s nothing surprising about a fire pit generating air pollution, but I didn’t realize how intense and localized that air pollution could be, even though I was four stories up in a half-a-city-block-sized area. This is air quality on a microscale.

    Image may contain Lighting Light Adult and Person

    Photograph: Lisa Wood Shapiro

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleMatter and Form’s Three 3D Scanner Is Shockingly Easy to Operate
    Next Article Hackers Went Looking for a Backdoor in High-Security Safes—and Now Can Open Them in Seconds

    Related Posts

    Spin Bike Like Jess King: Inside the Popular Peloton Coach’s Starter Pack

    Spin Bike Like Jess King: Inside the Popular Peloton Coach’s Starter Pack

    December 10, 2025
    Get (or Gift) 2 Years of Spectacular Shaves for  Right Now

    Get (or Gift) 2 Years of Spectacular Shaves for $80 Right Now

    December 9, 2025
    iFixit Put a Chatbot Repair Expert in an App

    iFixit Put a Chatbot Repair Expert in an App

    December 9, 2025
    The Best Dutch Oven, Pizza Oven, or Air Fryer for Home Cooks

    The Best Dutch Oven, Pizza Oven, or Air Fryer for Home Cooks

    December 9, 2025
    JBL’s Grip Is a Bluetooth Speaker With Lava Lamp Vibes

    JBL’s Grip Is a Bluetooth Speaker With Lava Lamp Vibes

    December 9, 2025
    Can Bike Riders and Self-Driving Cars Be Friends?

    Can Bike Riders and Self-Driving Cars Be Friends?

    December 9, 2025
    Our Picks
    How to tweak your online platform algorithms

    How to tweak your online platform algorithms

    December 29, 2025
    Windows on Arm had another good year

    Windows on Arm had another good year

    December 29, 2025
    This experimental camera can focus on everything at once

    This experimental camera can focus on everything at once

    December 29, 2025
    Xiaomi’s 17 Ultra Leica edition has a rotatable camera zoom

    Xiaomi’s 17 Ultra Leica edition has a rotatable camera zoom

    December 29, 2025
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    Google Photos is coming to Samsung TVs in 2026 News

    Google Photos is coming to Samsung TVs in 2026

    By News RoomDecember 29, 2025

    Google Photos will finally be available on TVs next year, starting with an upcoming integration…

    LG announces new UltraGear evo gaming monitors with AI upscaling

    LG announces new UltraGear evo gaming monitors with AI upscaling

    December 28, 2025
    Ubisoft shuts down ‘Rainbow Six Siege’ servers following hack

    Ubisoft shuts down ‘Rainbow Six Siege’ servers following hack

    December 28, 2025
    Samsung will debut two new wireless speakers at CES 2026

    Samsung will debut two new wireless speakers at CES 2026

    December 27, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of use
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    © 2025 Technology Mag. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.