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. 2016 Aug 22;113(36):10013–10018. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1602212113

Table S1.

Meteorological parameters that characterized fog dissipation events during SPC2011

Event Fog dissipation time WS, m/s Rad, W/m2 Delta W/m2 Delta °C r aqSOA–HMS r aqSOA–guaiacol dimer
1 11/16/11 10:26:00 0.95 370 164 0.40 0.77 0.39
2 11/17/11 09:01:00 0.75 184 125 2.20 0.91 0.66
3 11/18/11 09:35:00 0.70 302 215 3.35 0.92 0.86
4 11/19/11 11:10:00 1.10 343 41 3.15 0.60 0.52
5 11/21/11 12:12:00 1.20 68 7 0.45 0.27 0.31
6 11/25/11 22:31:00 2.75 −0.95 0.00 −0.28
7 11/26/11 04:27:00 3.20 −0.15 0.76 −0.22
8 11/27/11 04:28:00 3.10 0.05 0.22 0.00
9 11/28/11 10:06:00 1.00 292 148 6.35 0.81 0.93
10 11/28/11 23:46:00 2.15 0.20 0.12 −0.64
11 11/29/11 08:53:00 2.65 141 138 3.95 −0.04 0.92
12 11/30/11 07:52:00 2.90 47 49 2.05 0.39 0.73
13 11/30/11 21:31:00 1.50 −1.45 0.74 0.70
14 12/1/11 7:34 1.35 15 18 0.65 0.31 0.00

Boldface type identifies fog dissipation events due to radiative effect (the four events addressed in this paper). The last two columns report Pearson correlation coefficients (r) of relevant parameters (correlations of radiative fog dissipations have P < 0.0001).