Abstract
With the increasing awareness of the health impacts of particulate matter, there is a growing need to comprehend the spatial and temporal variations of the global abundance of ground level airborne particulate matter with a diameter of 2.5 microns or less (PM2.5). Here we use a suite of remote sensing and meteorological data products together with groundbased observations of particulate matter from 8,329 measurement sites in 55 countries taken 1997-2014 to train a machinelearning algorithm to estimate the daily distributions of PM2.5from 1997 to the present. In this first paper of a series, we present the methodology and global average results from this period and demonstrate that the new PM2.5 data product can reliably represent global observations of PM2.5for epidemiological studies.
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Lary, D. J., Faruque, F. S., Malakar, N., Moore, A., Roscoe, B., Adams, Z. L., & Eggelston, Y. (2014). Estimating the global abundance of ground level presence of particulate matter (PM2.5). Geospatial Health, 8(3), S611–S630. https://doi.org/10.4081/gh.2014.292
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