Hi Carsten,
Quoting Asimov ... "That's funny"
I have 2 theories as to why this behaviour.
First, instrument malfunction. Given the abrupt change in behaviour in
the CO and NO2 data streams, it is possible that they just didn't like
to be taken outside. Condensation from the cold air outside, sensors
not exposed to air, etc. What makes me think this is possible is the
fact that the CO data stream is FLAT, not "near zero" or "featureless"
but dead flat except for 5 points. As Joe indicated before, the CO
*must* be going up and down because there is a power cycle in there
and you should get spikes when the sensor is "high". Now, this may be
because the plot I can see for last week just doesn't have that high
resolution so I just can't see the cycles but if the high frequency
data doesn't have the cycling behaviour, then the sensor is wrong. The
NO2 on the other hand doesn't fit this so this leads me to what I
think is the most likely explanation:
Indoor sources. The CO sensor used (MQ7) has very poor sensitivity and
it requires quite a bit of CO in the air to register anything. I'd bet
that it is also the case for the NO2 one. I've run several of these
kinds of cells on "ambient air" and unless you're near a combustion
source, the output is very low. The options I can think of are:
1.- Smokers inside
2.- Unflued gas heaters
3.- Kerosene heater
4.- Gas kitchen
5.- Hydrogen source in the house
Some exotic solvent used in the house?
If someone can recover the raw 1s data I can make more informed
guesses.
Regards
/El Gus