Night-sky brightness monitoring in Hong Kong - a city-wide light pollution assessment
Chun Shing Jason Pun, Chu Wing So

TL;DR
This study presents the first comprehensive survey of night-sky brightness across Hong Kong, revealing severe light pollution especially in urban areas, with brightness levels influenced by human activity and time of night.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive, city-wide measurement of light pollution in Hong Kong using portable sensors over 15 months, establishing a baseline for future policy and research.
Findings
Urban night-skies are ~100 times brighter than rural sites.
In the worst areas, sky brightness exceeds 500 times the darkest sites.
Night-sky brightness decreases later in the night, influenced by lighting policies.
Abstract
Results of the first comprehensive light pollution survey in Hong Kong are presented. The night-sky brightness was measured and monitored around the city using a portable light sensing device called the Sky Quality Meter over a 15-month period beginning in March 2008. A total of 1,957 data sets were taken at 199 distinct locations, including urban and rural sites covering all 18 Administrative Districts of Hong Kong. The survey shows that the environmental light pollution problem in Hong Kong is severe - the urban night-skies (sky brightness at 15.0 mag per arcsec square) are on average ~100 times brighter than at the darkest rural sites (20.1 mag per arcsec square), indicating that the high lighting densities in the densely populated residential and commercial areas lead to light pollution. In the worst polluted urban location studied, the night-sky at 13.2 mag per arcsec square can be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImpact of Light on Environment and Health
