Submitted by colorado_hick t3_100y631 in askscience
I live in rural Colorado. It appears to me that during the winter time when I look at the mountains in the distance the edges seem to be more crisply defined then the same views in the summer time, especially on really cold days. I do not know if this is because the colors are different? Or if it is something psychosomatic? Or does the higher heat on warm days lead to some sort of optical distortion (similar to a low-grade mirage effect)?
uber_snotling t1_j2kteqn wrote
Humidity is the key thing here. Colder air holds less water vapor.
There is an equation that describes visibility and the Western US always has much longer view-lengths than the Eastern US because of the relative water vapor content (and to a lesser extent, sulfates from coal are way way down in the whole US).
Too much detail here, but RH = relative humidity and the other stuff is pollutants in particulate matter in the air.
bext ≈ 3 × f(RH) × [Ammonium Sulfate] + 3 × f(RH) × [Ammonium Nitrate] +
4 × [Organic Mass] + 10 × [Elemental Carbon] + 1 × [Fine Soil] + 0.6 × [Coarse Mass]
+ Rayleigh scattering