Wildfire smoke from distant fires turns skies orange: optics and health explained
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Summary
CBC's 'About That' segment explains how smoke from wildfires hundreds to thousands of kilometers away, including recent fires in northwestern Ontario, creates yellow-orange skies in places like Boston and Toronto. It covers the physics of particulate scattering of sunlight and resulting health risks from inhalation. Segments include visuals of smoky conditions and expert commentary on symptoms and protections. Sourcing relies on unnamed experts and standard public-health guidance; no specific named guests or graphics beyond illustrative clips.
Editorial Assessment
The broadcast accurately conveys established atmospheric science on Mie scattering by smoke particles and aligns with current EPA/CDC assessments of PM2.5 risks, including both acute respiratory effects and longer-term concerns. Viewers receive clear, actionable advice on masks and indoor air without overstatement. Minor context missing on exact distance or fire counts in the referenced event, but this does not undermine the core explanation. Framing remains neutral and educational rather than alarmist.
Key Moments
Wildfire smoke particles scatter blue light away, leaving yellow-orange-red hues
Consistent with Mie scattering physics and recent observations in Toronto, Connecticut and New England
Inhaling smoke causes coughing, shortness of breath, headaches; worse for asthma, heart conditions, young and old
Directly supported by CDC and EPA wildfire-smoke health-effect summaries
Long-term risks include increased cancer, dementia and neurodevelopmental delays in children
EPA notes premature mortality and inflammation risks; emerging studies link PM2.5 to neurological outcomes
Sources Consulted
- Health Effects Attributed to Wildfire Smoke | US EPA
- How Wildfire Smoke Affects Your Body | CDC
- Environment Canada warns of 'very poor' air quality as wildfire smoke blankets Toronto | CBC
- Why Connecticut's sky turned orange Tuesday as wildfire smoke moved in | CT Insider
- Wildfire smoke impacts respiratory health more than fine particles from other sources | Nature Communications