Chapter 7: Visibility and Fog

DGCA CPL/ATPL Study Notes β€” Aviation Meteorology
Based on IC Joshi Aviation Meteorology Textbook
Compiled by Capt. Pankaj Pahil

Table of Contents

1. Definition of Visibility

Visibility (Aeronautical Definition): The greatest distance at which a black object of suitable dimensions, situated near the ground, can be seen and recognised when observed against the bright background.

Night Definition: The greatest distance at which lights in the vicinity of 1,000 candela can be seen and identified against an unlit background.

In simple terms: The distance up to which prominent objects can be seen by naked eye and recognized as such under natural light.

Visibility on the ground and from the air are of great importance to a pilot for landing and take-off. The pilot needs to see various land marks, targets, obstructions, beacon lights, other aircraft, runways etc., while in flight and during approach and landing. Poor visibility is a serious aviation hazard. Even at airfields where ILS is installed, a pilot would prefer better visibility conditions for safe landing and take-offs.

2. Visibility Reports & RVR

Visibility Reports

MethodDaytimeNight-time
Estimation MethodSeeing runway markings and objects at pre-measured distances along the runway, within and around the airfieldFrom existing lights at known distances in and around the airport β€” called Visibility Land Marks

Runway Visual Range (RVR)

Definition: The range over which the pilot of an aircraft on the centre line of the runway can see the runway markings or the lights delineating the runway or identifying its centre line.
πŸ’‘ Exam Tip: RVR reported when visibility < 1500m. METAR includes RVR 2000 and 1500 as supplementary β€” but these are NOT disseminated internationally. The instrument is called Scopograph or Transmissometer.

3. Causes of Poor Visibility

The surface visibility is reduced by atmospheric obscurities, such as smoke particles, sea spray, dust, industrial particles, vehicular emission, volcanic ash, etc.
ObscurityDefinitionVisibilitySpecial Notes
HazeSuspension of very small particles of smoke, dust, water, etc. Gives a milky appearance≀5000 mβ€”
Dust HazeDust kicked up by strong winds, especially in desert/semi-arid areas; suspended in air; causes Dust Haze. Summer hazard. Thicker during day.Widely reduced; diversionary hazardExtends from Rajasthan to Punjab, Haryana, UP, Bihar; vertically may extend 6–8 km
Smoke HazeFrom industrial/domestic sources; spreads as haze layer, especially when wind is calm or very light and strong ground inversionWidely reducedβ€”
MistSuspension of water droplets in atmosphereβ‰₯1000 m but ≀5000 mRH is almost 100%
FogSuspension of water droplets or ice crystals; RH ~100%<1000 mClassified as: Thick, Moderate, Light. Fog is the cloud sitting on ground.
SmogWhen fog and smoke co-existVery poorSeverely limits visibility; health hazard
Dust Storm—≀5000 mIf followed by rain visibility improves fast
Sea SprayUnder favourable wind conditions, salt particles sprayed from wave crests; water drops form; thin layer at low level and on wind screenConsiderable reductionIn rare cases reduces forward visibility to almost zero on wind screen; also during monsoons and cyclones
Volcanic Ash (VA)Solid matter from volcanoes; carried by winds; suspended for long timeSurface and in-flight: almost nilSeverely damages engine and other aircraft parts. Indian Volcano: Barren Island (12.16N 93.51E) β€” first erupted 1787, most recent 2020. Baratang Island lies 150 km N of Port Blair.
PrecipitationRain, showers, drizzle, snowfallVariable (see table below)β€”

Visibility in Precipitation

Precipitation TypeIntensityVisibility
RainModerate1–3 km
Rain/ShowersHeavy<1000 m
DrizzleAny<1000 m
SnowAnymay fall <1000 m
⚠ Volcanic Ash β€” Aviation Warning: VA reduces surface and in-flight visibility to almost nil. It severely damages engines and other aircraft parts. Volcanoes are active in Japan, Philippines, Indonesia, America, Mexico, Iceland, Russia, etc. If VA is encountered, pilots must exit the area immediately.
Indian context: Barren Island (12.16N 93.51E) β€” first erupted 1787, most recent 2020. Baratang Island (mud volcano) is 150 km N of Port Blair.
flowchart TD
    PV["CAUSES OF POOR VISIBILITY"] --> H["Haze ≀5000m\n(smoke/dust/water)"]
    PV --> DH["Dust Haze\n(desert storms, summer)"]
    PV --> SH["Smoke Haze\n(industrial, inversion)"]
    PV --> M["Mist 1000-5000m\nRH~100%"]
    PV --> F["FOG <1000m\nRH~100%"]
    PV --> DS["Dust Storm ≀5000m"]
    PV --> SS["Sea Spray\n(coastal, thin layer)"]
    PV --> VA["Volcanic Ash\n(almost nil, engine damage)"]
    PV --> P["Precipitation\n(1-3km mod rain,\n<1km heavy/drizzle/snow)"]
    F --> RF["Radiation Fog"]
    F --> AF["Advection Fog"]
    F --> STF["Steaming Fog"]
    F --> FF["Frontal Fog"]
    F --> UF["Upslope Fog"]
    F --> IF["Inversion Fog"]

4. Vertical and Slant Visibility

Haze and fog layers are generally confined to a few thousand feet above ground level. In a shallow layer of haze or fog, the horizontal visibility is poor. A pilot flying above such a layer may see the airfield clearly through a vertically thinner layer of fog, but on approach for landing, as he has to see through an elongated layer of fog, he may lose sight of the runway. In such a case:

As one goes higher and higher, the transparency of the atmosphere increases considerably, except in cloud and precipitation. Visibility is lower looking towards the sun due to reflection of the moon light (also applies to looking towards the sun during daytime).

AERODROME Fog/Haze layer ✈ Aircraft descending Vertical viz (GOOD) Slant viz (POOR) Aerodrome clearly visible from directly above Thick fog base

5. Instruments for Measuring Visibility

Scopograph or Transmissometer: Used for measuring visibility along the different runways on an aerodrome. RVR equipment installed along various runways close to take-off and landing areas. Consists of a light source and a photoelectric receiver; equipment generates electric current according to the obscurities present between the receiver and the source. Current generated gives a measure of RVR. Display units located in the Met Office and ATC Tower.

6. Types of Fog

6.1 Radiation Fog

Formation: Radiation fog forms due to nocturnal cooling of the ground and the adjacent air layers. It is essential that the cooling should lower the temperature below the dew-point. If the wind is light, there is no turbulent mixing. The cooling of the ground is unable to extend upwards at sufficient rate β€” moisture close to the ground settles down as dew. If wind is strong, it may prevent cooling or cool too thick a layer β€” fog forms. The temperature may not fall sufficiently for fog formation. In such cases stratus cloud may form at the top of the layer of turbulence.

Favourable Conditions for Radiation Fog Formation

ConditionReason
(a) High Relative HumidityLittle cooling needed to reach dew-point; condensation of water vapour can occur
(b) Clear SkyClear skies permit maximum nocturnal cooling of ground and adjacent air layers
(c) Light Wind: 3–7 ktEnables turbulent mixing and cooling of layers close to ground; brings their temperature to dew-point
(d) StabilityGenerally stable atmosphere, so mixing and cooling are confined to a shallow layer
⚠ Why Calm Wind Can Prevent Radiation Fog: If the wind is too light (calm), there is no turbulent mixing. The cooling of the ground is unable to extend upwards fast enough β€” moisture close to ground merely settles down as dew, NOT fog.

Why Strong Wind Can Prevent Radiation Fog: Turbulence prevents cooling any one layer enough; cooling spreads over too thick a layer and temperature doesn't fall to dew point.

Characteristics of Radiation Fog

Radiation Fog in India

⚠ Radiation Fog β€” Indian Aviation Hazard (Winter):

6.2 Advection Fog

Formation: Forms when warm moist air from elsewhere is transported over a cold surface (ground or water) where the surface temperature is less than the dew point of the advected air. Advection fog forms both over land and sea.
πŸ’‘ Key Distinction: Radiation Fog = nocturnal cooling of ground (stationary process). Advection Fog = horizontal transport of warm moist air over cold surface (dynamic process). Advection fog can form DAY or NIGHT; Radiation fog mainly at night.

6.3 Steaming Fog (Sea Smoke)

Formation: Occurs at high latitudes when cold air mass flows over a warm sea surface. The water vapour from the warm sea condenses as it lifts into the cold air. Looks like steam coming out of the sea surface. Hence called Sea Smoke.

6.4 Frontal Fog

Formation: Occurs on the sloping boundary between two contrasting air masses due to the saturation of the air near the surface in the area of continuous rain ahead of a front. Also forms due to the lowering of cloud to the surface with the passage of a front.

6.5 Upslope Fog

Formation: Forms due to lifting of moist air along a sloping hill or plains β€” due to adiabatic cooling.

6.6 Inversion Fog

Formation: Occurs in an anticyclonic area when cold air, due to subsidence, comes in contact with a warm water body.

Fog Types β€” Comparison Table

Fog TypeCauseTimeLocationKey Characteristic
RadiationNocturnal cooling; radiation lossNight β†’ morningLand; valleys, depressionsClear sky + light 3-7kt wind required; dissipates 2-3hr after sunrise
AdvectionWarm moist air over cold surfaceDay or NightLand and sea coastsMore persistent; can be thick; Bengal/Orissa coastal fogs in winter
Steaming (Sea Smoke)Cold air over warm seaAny timeHigh latitude seasLooks like steam; Iceland/Norway
FrontalRain ahead of front saturates air; cloud lowers to surfaceWith frontal passageFrontal zonesAssociated with Western Disturbances; common with Cold Fronts
UpslopeMoist air lifts along slope; adiabatic coolingAnyHill slopes, plainsβ€”
InversionSubsiding cold air meets warm water bodyAnyAnticyclonic areas; coastsIn anticyclone with temperature inversion
flowchart LR
    subgraph Formation
    A["Clear night\n+ High RH\n+ 3-7kt wind\n+ Stable air"] --> RF["RADIATION FOG\n(most common in India)"]
    B["Warm moist air\ntransported over\ncold surface"] --> AF["ADVECTION FOG\n(land + sea, day/night)"]
    C["Cold air over\nwarm sea"] --> STF["STEAMING FOG\n(Sea Smoke)"]
    D["Rain ahead of front\nor cloud lowering"] --> FF["FRONTAL FOG"]
    E["Moist air lifted\nalong slope"] --> UF["UPSLOPE FOG\n(Adiabatic cooling)"]
    F["Subsiding cold air\n+ warm water body"] --> IF["INVERSION FOG\n(Anticyclone)"]
    end

7. Fog Dispersal

Thermal Method

When air is heated to temperature above the dew point, fog or clouds will dissipate. During the Second World War, heaters, burners, fires were used to disperse fog but the method involved large expenditures and was discontinued.

Use of Hygroscopic Nuclei

When hygroscopic particles are injected into fog water drops form. This lowers the RH of the air, leading to dissipation of fog. Seeding with dry ice or silver iodide or propane gas produces freezing and precipitation.

πŸ’‘ Fog Dispersal Methods:
1. Thermal Method β€” heat air above dew point (expensive, discontinued after WWII)
2. Hygroscopic Nuclei / Cloud Seeding β€” dry ice, silver iodide, propane gas β†’ freezing and precipitation β†’ lowers RH β†’ fog dissipates

Practice Q&A β€” Chapter 7: Visibility and Fog

Q1. Fog is reported when visibility is reduced to
(a) Less than 1000m   (b) 1000m   (c) 1000 to 2000
βœ… Answer: (a) Less than 1000m β€” Fog is defined as visibility reduced to LESS than 1000m, with RH nearly 100%.
❌ (b) 1000m exactly: At exactly 1000m it is still Mist (β‰₯1000m ≀5000m).
❌ (c) 1000-2000m: This is the Mist range.
πŸ’‘ Mnemonic: "Fog < 1000m. Mist = 1000–5000m." RH ~100% in both cases.
Q2. RVR is reported in visibility falls below
(a) 500m   (b) 1000m   (c) 1500m   (d) 2000m
βœ… Answer: (c) 1500m β€” RVR is reported when visibility is less than 1500m.
❌ Others: Only c is correct per the text β€” "RVR is reported when visibility is less than 1500m."
πŸ’‘ "RVR = 1500m trigger point." RVR 2000 and 1500 included in METAR as supplementary but NOT disseminated internationally.
Q3. Radiation fog occurs:
(a) Over land   (b) Over sea   (c) During day
βœ… Answer: (a) Over land β€” Radiation fog requires nocturnal cooling of the GROUND surface. It forms over land, particularly in valleys and depressions.
❌ (b) Over sea: Radiation fog does not typically form over sea as sea temperature varies very little diurnally.
❌ (c) During day: Radiation fog forms at night and persists until morning; daytime heating dissipates it.
πŸ’‘ "Radiation Fog = Land + Night + Clear sky + 3-7kt wind."
Q4. If visibility reduces between 5000m and 1000m and RH is almost 100%, it is
(a) Mist   (b) Haze   (c) Fog
βœ… Answer: (a) Mist β€” Mist: visibility β‰₯1000m but ≀5000m, RH almost 100%. Composed of water droplets.
❌ (b) Haze: Haze visibility ≀5000m but it's composed of dry particles (smoke, dust, water), RH not necessarily ~100%.
❌ (c) Fog: Fog is visibility <1000m.
πŸ’‘ "Mist = 1000-5000m, wet (water droplets), RH~100%. Haze = ≀5000m, dry particles, milky appearance."
Q5. Radiation Fog forms over N India during:
(a) May to June   (b) Dec to Feb   (c) Oct to Nov
βœ… Answer: (b) Dec to Feb β€” Radiation fog in India is a winter hazard, typically December to February, especially after passage of Western Disturbances.
❌ (a) May to June: This is pre-monsoon / summer season β€” too warm for radiation fog.
❌ (c) Oct to Nov: Transition season; not the primary radiation fog season.
πŸ’‘ "India Radiation Fog = Winter (Dec-Feb) after WD." The Brahmaputra valley is particularly affected β€” almost daily in winters.
Q6. Warm and moist air moving over a cold surface causes:
(a) Thunder clouds   (b) Fog and stratus   (c) Frontal clouds
βœ… Answer: (b) Fog and stratus β€” Warm moist air moving over cold surface = Advection Fog. The surface chills the air from below, leading to fog or stratus.
❌ (a) Thunder clouds: Thunderclouds require strong instability and rising motion β€” not created by cold surface.
❌ (c) Frontal clouds: These require frontal lifting.
πŸ’‘ "Advection Fog = Warm air + Cold surface = Fog + Stratus." Classic coastal fog mechanism.
Q7. The radiation fog activity increases after the passage of a ………
(a) WD   (b) Depression   (c) Col
βœ… Answer: (a) WD (Western Disturbance) β€” Radiation fog in India usually forms after the passage of a WD which caused rain and then sky cleared, leaving adequate moisture in the air.
❌ (b) Depression: Generally brings cloud cover and rain β€” not favourable after depression.
❌ (c) Col: Col can be favourable but WD is specifically mentioned in the text as the trigger.
πŸ’‘ WD sequence: WD arrives β†’ rain β†’ sky clears β†’ moisture left β†’ radiation fog forms. Classic NW India winter pattern.
Q8. The radiation fog forms due to
(a) Heating of the earth during day
(b) Radiational cooling of earth at night
(c) Advection of cold air
βœ… Answer: (b) Radiational cooling of earth at night β€” The ground radiates heat at night, cooling the adjacent air layers below the dew point, forming radiation fog.
❌ (a) Daytime heating: Daytime heating promotes convection and dissipates fog.
❌ (c) Advection of cold air: That is Advection Fog mechanism (warm moist air over cold surface).
Q9. Radiation fog is essentially a ………phenomena
(a) Nocturnal   (b) Dusk   (c) Day
βœ… Answer: (a) Nocturnal β€” Radiation fog forms at night (nocturnal) due to radiative cooling of the earth's surface.
Q10. Radiation fog forms over ……
(a) Water   (b) Land   (c) Both
βœ… Answer: (b) Land β€” Radiation fog requires significant diurnal temperature variation, which occurs over land. Sea temperature is nearly constant.
Q11. The ……… fog forms due to horizontal movement of warm moist air over cold surface
(a) Radiation   (b) Advection   (c) Frontal
βœ… Answer: (b) Advection β€” Advection Fog = horizontal transport (advection) of warm moist air over a cold surface.
❌ (a) Radiation: Radiation fog = vertical (radiative) cooling of stationary air.
❌ (c) Frontal: Frontal fog = saturation from rain ahead of front or cloud lowering.
Q12. The ……… fog forms due to horizontal movement of warm moist air over cold surface
(a) Radiation   (b) Advection   (c) Frontal
βœ… Answer: (b) Advection β€” Same as Q11.
Q13. Advection fog forms during:
(a) Night only   (b) Day time only   (c) Any time of day and night
βœ… Answer: (c) Any time of day and night β€” Advection fog can form at any time because it depends on the horizontal transport of warm moist air, not on day/night cycle.
❌ (a) Night only: That's a characteristic of radiation fog.
❌ (b) Daytime only: No fog type is daytime-only.
πŸ’‘ "Radiation fog = NIGHT process. Advection fog = ANY TIME." Key exam distinction.
Q14. For the formation of Radiation fog
(a) There should be sufficient moisture in atmosphere, cloudy sky, nil wind
(b) There should be sufficient moisture in atmosphere, clear sky, light wind
(c) There should be sufficient moisture in atmosphere, cloudy sky, strong wind
βœ… Answer: (b) Sufficient moisture, clear sky, light wind (3-7kt) β€” The three essential conditions: high RH, clear sky for nocturnal cooling, and light winds for turbulent mixing down to the surface.
❌ (a) Cloudy sky, nil wind: Cloudy sky prevents radiation cooling. Nil/calm wind β†’ dew forms, not fog.
❌ (c) Cloudy sky, strong wind: Cloudy sky prevents cooling; strong wind mixes fog away or too thick a layer cooled.
πŸ’‘ "Radiation Fog conditions: HIGH RH + CLEAR SKY + LIGHT 3-7kt WIND + STABLE AIR." All four must be present.
Q15. Instrument used for measuring visibility is called
(a) Viscometer   (b) Transmissometer   (c) Ceilometer
βœ… Answer: (b) Transmissometer β€” Also called Scopograph. Measures visibility along runways. Uses light source and photoelectric receiver.
❌ (a) Viscometer: Measures viscosity of fluids β€” unrelated.
❌ (c) Ceilometer: Measures cloud base height, not visibility.
πŸ’‘ "Transmissometer = visibility. Ceilometer = cloud base. Barometer = pressure."
Q16. Advection fog forms:
(a) Over sea   (b) Over land   (c) Both over land and sea
βœ… Answer: (c) Both over land and sea β€” Advection fog forms wherever warm moist air is transported over a colder surface, which can be land or sea.
πŸ’‘ Classic example: Coastal fogs of Bengal/Orissa in winters (advection + radiation combination). San Francisco Bay Area fog is classic sea advection fog.
Q17. Fog is ……… cloud on ground
(a) Stratus   (b) Strato cumulus   (c) Nimbostratus
βœ… Answer: (a) Stratus β€” Fog is essentially stratus cloud sitting on the ground. The textbook states: "Fog is the cloud sitting on ground."
❌ (b) Stratocumulus: Has patchy, lumpy structure β€” not the flat fog layer.
❌ (c) Nimbostratus: Rain-bearing grey layer cloud at significant height.
πŸ’‘ "Fog = Stratus at ground level." As radiation fog lifts with morning heating, it becomes stratus clouds.
Q18. Frontal fog is more common with a:
(a) Western Disturbance   (b) Cyclone   (c) Cold Front
βœ… Answer: (c) Cold Front β€” Frontal fog is most common with Cold Fronts (heavy rain ahead, sharp temperature contrast). Also mentioned with Western Disturbances.
❌ (b) Cyclone: Cyclones bring widespread rain and cloud, but specific frontal fog mechanism is different.
πŸ’‘ Book states: "Frontal Fog is more common with a Cold Front." WD also mentioned as triggering radiation fog after it passes.
Q19. The favourable pressure system for formation of fog is:
(a) Lows and Cols   (b) High and Trough   (c) Highs and Ridges
βœ… Answer: (c) Highs (Anticyclones) and Ridges β€” In anticyclones, ridges, and cols the wind is light, there is subsidence and stability, and the skies are clear β€” all favourable for radiation fog formation. "Lows and Ridges" and "Highs and Cols" could be partially correct but the textbook specifically mentions anticyclones, ridges, and cols.
πŸ’‘ "Fog = Anticyclone/Ridge/Col" β€” think clear skies, light winds, stable air. Steep PGF (lows) = windy = no fog.
Q20. Thermal processes / temperature distribution which favours formation of fog is:
(a) Isothermal   (b) Adiabatic   (c) Inversion   (d) SALR
βœ… Answer: (c) Inversion β€” A temperature inversion traps moisture and prevents mixing. Fog commonly forms at the top of an inversion layer, or underneath an inversion where cool moist air is trapped. Radiative cooling creates a surface inversion which is the typical radiation fog environment.
❌ (a) Isothermal: Temperature constant with height β€” less conducive to fog than inversion.
❌ (b) Adiabatic: Adiabatic process relates to rising/sinking air β€” upslope fog only.
❌ (d) SALR: Saturated adiabatic lapse rate is about in-cloud processes.
πŸ’‘ "Fog loves inversions" β€” temperature inversion = stable = no mixing = fog can persist. Radiation fog itself CREATES a surface inversion.

Master Reference Tables β€” Chapter 7: Visibility and Fog

Key Numerical Values

ParameterValue
Fog: visibility threshold<1000 m
Mist: visibility rangeβ‰₯1000 m but ≀5000 m
Haze: visibility≀5000 m
Dust Storm visibility≀5000 m
RVR reporting trigger<1500 m
RVR in METAR (supplementary)2000 and 1500 m (not disseminated internationally)
Mist: RH~100%
Fog: RH~100%
Favourable wind for radiation fog3–7 kt
Radiation fog dissipation after sunrise~2–3 hours
Radiation fog vertical extentfew hundred feet to 1500 ft (max 1 km)
Dust Haze vertical extent6–8 km
Visibility in moderate rain1–3 km
Visibility in heavy rain/drizzle/snow<1000 m
Barren Island (Indian volcano) position12.16N 93.51E
Barren Island first eruption1787
Barren Island most recent eruption2020
Baratang Island distance from Port Blair150 km N

Fog Formation Conditions Summary

Fog TypeKey ConditionsTimeIndian Context
RadiationHigh RH + Clear sky + 3-7kt wind + Stability + Anticyclone/RidgeNight β†’ AMNW India, UP, Bihar, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Bengal, Assam; after WD; Dec-Feb
AdvectionWarm moist air + Cold surface (land or sea)AnyBengal/Orissa coastal (advection + radiation)
SteamingCold air over warm seaAnyNot common; high latitude seas
FrontalContinuous rain ahead of front; cloud lowers to surfaceWith frontWith Cold Fronts and WD
UpslopeMoist air + slope + lifting + adiabatic coolingAnyHill stations, plains adjacent to hills
InversionAnticyclonic subsidence + warm water body + cold airAnyCoastal anticyclonic areas

Visibility Obscurity Classification

ObscurityVisibilityCompositionRH
Haze≀5000mSmoke, dust, water particlesVariable; milky appearance
Dust HazeWidely reduced; diversionaryDust from desert/semi-aridVariable; summer
Smoke HazeWidely reducedIndustrial/domestic smokeVariable; stable/inversion
Mistβ‰₯1000m, ≀5000mWater droplets~100%
Fog<1000mWater droplets or ice crystals~100%
SmogVery poorFog + smoke~100% + pollutants
Dust Storm≀5000mDust particlesLow
Sea SprayVariable; almost nil at windscreenSalt particles, water dropsHigh
Volcanic AshAlmost nilSolid volcanic particlesVariable

Q&A Answer Key

Q1=aQ2=cQ3=aQ4=aQ5=bQ6=bQ7=aQ8=bQ9=aQ10=b
Q11=bQ12=bQ13=cQ14=bQ15=bQ16=cQ17=aQ18=cQ19=cQ20=c

Quick Revision Summary β€” Chapter 7

Chapter 7 β€” Visibility & Fog: 60-Second Revision

Definitions: Fog <1000m; Mist 1000–5000m; Haze ≀5000m (all RH); Smog = fog+smoke
RVR: Reported when viz <1500m. Instrument = Transmissometer/Scopograph. AVRA at some Indian Met Offices.
Radiation Fog: Night cooling + Clear sky + 3-7kt wind + High RH + Stability β†’ land only; After WD in India; NW India/UP/Bihar/Jharkhand/Chattisgarh/Bengal/Assam; Lifts 2-3hr after sunrise; Top sharp; Ext: few 100ft to 1500ft max 1km
Advection Fog: Warm moist air over cold surface; land + sea; day or night; Bengal/Orissa coastal (advection+radiation)
Steaming Fog: Cold air over warm sea; Iceland/Norway
Frontal Fog: Cold Front rain saturation / cloud lowers to surface
Upslope: Adiabatic cooling on slope
Inversion: Anticyclone + cold air + warm water
Dispersal: Thermal (discontinued, expensive) or Seeding (dry ice, AgI, propane)
VA: Barren Island (12.16N 93.51E); first erupted 1787; last 2020; Baratang = 150km N Port Blair
Capt. Pankaj Pahil