Fireworks light up the night sky, but they also fill it with visibility-reducing soot, researchers warn.
Tracking visibility changes at 34 meteorological stations across the United Kingdom, atmospheric scientists from the University of Birmingham in England found that visibility dropped by around 25 percent each year on November’s Guy Fawkes Night before returning to normal a day or two later. The nighttime celebration is the country’s largest fireworks event. The fiery displays, including bonfires, triple the amount of black carbon in the air, the researchers discovered, reducing visibility and potentially increasing the risk of car crashes.
Similar celebrations, such as New Year’s Eve and the Fourth of July, could pose similar risks, the researchers say.
25
percent
Average drop in visibility each year in the United Kingdom during Guy Fawkes Night
3x
Increase in airborne black carbon during Guy Fawkes Night