NowCast (air quality index)

PM2.5 AQI of US monitors, calculated utilizing NowCast, courtesy US EPA
PM2.5 AQI map, calculated utilizing NowCast, courtesy US EPA

The PM (particulate matter) NowCast is a weighted average of hourly air monitoring data used by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) for real-time reporting of the Air Quality Index (AQI) for PM (PM10 - particles less than 10 micrometers, or PM2.5 - particles less than 2.5 micrometers).

The PM NowCast is computed from the most recent 12 hours of PM monitoring data, but the NowCast weights the most recent hours of data more heavily than an ordinary 12-hour average when pollutant levels are changing. The PM NowCast is used in lieu of a 24-hour average PM concentration in the calculation of the AQI until an entire calendar day of hourly concentrations has been monitored.

The Ozone NowCast is an algorithm[1] developed by the USEPA to predict the 8-hour ozone average centered on the current hour from the current 1-hr average ozone data. At each ozone monitoring site, partial least squares regression is used to develop a predictive relationship between the 1-hr and 8-hr averages using the previous 2 weeks of ozone data. USEPA uses the Ozone Nowcast for real time public reporting of the ozone AQI.[1]

  1. ^ White paper describing EPA Ozone Nowcast Algorithm, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 2019-08-05, retrieved 2019-08-07