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Los Angeles air quality enhances from wildfires' dangerous levels

Air quality in wildfirestricken Los Angeles improved on Thursday from hazardous peaks hit previously this month, as small soot particles that can penetrate the lungs and brain dropped to moderate levels, according to the Environmental Protection Agency's newest data.

WHY IT is necessary:

Smoke from several wildfires in metro Los Angeles negatively affects the air quality of a population of about 18 million people.

BY THE NUMBERS:

Air quality in Los Angeles was at moderate levels on Thursday early morning, as evaluated by the EPA's Air Quality Index ranking system. Moderate air quality is in between 51 and 100, or in the yellow band of the AQI scale. Air quality in the moderate variety can still be dangerous for people who are uncommonly delicate to air pollution.

On Jan. 8, however, the typical everyday AQI rating was 189, which symbolizes unhealthy air for sensitive groups, such as asthmatics, and some sections of the basic population. Early that day, per hour pollution levels signed up above 500 on the AQI, presenting a dangerous health danger to the general population.

(source: Reuters)