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Articles by Aaron Reuben

Aaron Reuben is a freelance journalist and researcher at the Yale Center for Environmental Law & Policy, where he studies the policy impacts of environmental metrics. He is co-founder of the Brooklyn-based literary arts journal Armchair / Shotgun and is a former editor-in-chief of the Yale environmental publication, SAGE Magazine.

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This story was originally published by Mother Jones and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

“We should get out of here,” says air pollution chemist Eben Cross. At 7 a.m. on this cold November day the wind blows steadily through the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Cambridge campus, cutting through our thin jackets. But Cross isn’t afraid of the cold. He worries about the air we’re breathing — especially considering the six fire trucks directly ahead, idling in the dim morning light.

“We’re getting hammered right now,” Cross says, shouting over the hum of the engines. He’s taken his gloves off to manipulate the display panel on his pollution monitor. The acrid smell of diesel is unmistakable. “Anytime you can smell it, you are in a regime that is very polluted,” he says. “In many ways your nose is a better mass spectrometer than any device on the market.”

Cross’ monitor measures the presence of microscopic particles suspended in the air. Earlier, in his home, the device reported average concentrations of between 10,000 and 100,000 airborne part... Read more

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