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You can blow it away, but you can't. The haze was simply blown away, not dissipated. The most fundamental approach is to be environmentally friendly.
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Of course, I work in Beijing, and I experience a lot of haze weather, as long as the wind blows at night, the next day will definitely be clear. Isn't there a saying that often says: If the spring breeze blows through the haze in the heart, it can be seen that the effect of the wind is very great.
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Of course, the gale can blow away the haze, because the haze itself is an object similar to solid dust with particles, and the gale can certainly blow it away. By the way, your next link: the snow is scattered and the winter is cold and the spring is sunny.
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There is a certain effect, the symptoms are not the root cause, and the smog in other places can also blow over.
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Yes, I often see smog in the morning when I go to school, but when the wind blows, the smog will run away one by one.
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Of course, it can be blown away, today's howling north wind has blown away the haze that has lasted for several days, I haven't seen the sun for about a week, and today the sun finally came out, thanks to the cold air from the north.
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You can blow it away, but you can't. The most fundamental method is to save energy, pay attention to environmental protection, and low-carbon travel.
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The wind sweeps the haze and sees the sun and the moon, which is very right, the wind can blow away the haze.
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OK. The wind blows the haze away. See the sun or the moon.
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Due to the lack of air circulation, the particles cannot disperse in time, and when they gather together, they form haze, so the wind can blow away the haze.
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Absolutely, smog is just small particles floating in the air that blow away as soon as the wind comes.
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To a certain extent, yes, but this is only blowing away the smog from the surface, and other strong measures are needed to fundamentally control the smog.
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I think it's okay, my city in Shenyang has less wind in winter, and the haze is more serious, and in the spring, the wind starts to blow and the haze will become less, or even none, and the spring wind is also very blue.
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In Beijing, the north wind drives away the smog.
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The wind expands and dilutes the haze so that it is blown away if it is not visible to the naked eye.
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In fact, these smogs don't disappear in a vacuum, they just continue to exist in a different place.
The wind is what makes the air come alive. Fog and haze are weather phenomena that are tens to hundreds of meters thick near the surface layer, and the entire atmospheric troposphere is tens of thousands of meters high. As cold air approaches, the upward movement near its front (i.e., the vertical wind) carries it to the upper atmosphere.
In addition to vertical winds, there are also horizontal winds, and northerly winds will bring clean air (except in spring when there is sand and dust) to North China, and it is not excluded that North China will spread to other regions, making the local air quality worse.