willco2_week.jpg The image displays a digital dashboard interface with a dark background, featuring date selection controls at the top and a large line graph below. At the very top left, there are two rectangular boxes indicating the time range for the data. The first box is labeled "Start date" and reads "March 3, 2024 at 12:00 AM". Next to it, the second box is labeled "End date" and reads "March 9, 2024 at 11:59 PM". To the right of these dates are three pill-shaped buttons. The first is orange with a plus sign and text reading "+ Choose area". The second is blue with a plus sign and text reading "+ Choose device". The third is light green with a plus sign and text reading "+ Choose entity". Below these buttons is a selected tag containing a small icon of "CO2" inside a circle, followed by the text "AirGradient SenseAir S8 CO2", with an 'x' symbol at the end to remove it. Centered below this control bar is a legend consisting of a blue dot and the label "AirGradient SenseAir S8 CO2". The main portion of the image is a line graph plotting data over time. The vertical axis on the left is labeled "ppm" (parts per million) and has numerical markers for 0, 500, 1,000, 1,500, and 2,000. The horizontal axis at the bottom displays dates and times, starting with "Mar 3" and progressing through "Mar 4", "Mar 5", "Mar 6", and "Mar 7". Time markers like "8:00 AM" and "4:00 PM" appear between the dates. Faint grey grid lines run vertically and horizontally across the graph area to help read values. A single, jagged blue line traces the data points. - On **March 3**, the line starts near 800 ppm, drops quickly to around 450 ppm, fluctuates slightly, spikes up to just over 1,000 ppm in the afternoon, and then settles back down to a low baseline of roughly 400-500 ppm for the night. - On **March 4**, the pattern repeats with a low baseline around 400 ppm, followed by a sharp spike reaching approximately 1,200 ppm before dropping again. - On **March 5**, there is another similar spike reaching just over 1,000 ppm during the day. - On **March 6**, the graph shows its most significant activity. After a period of lower levels, there is a massive, sharp spike that rises well past the 1,500 mark, peaking near 1,800 ppm. It then drops sharply back down to around 700-800 ppm for the remainder of the day. - On **March 7**, the line shows smaller fluctuations, with a spike reaching about 1,200 ppm and another rising to roughly 900 ppm later in the day. - Towards the far right edge of the graph, after a dip around 4:00 PM on March 7, the blue line begins a steady upward climb, ending near the 1,500 ppm mark at the very edge of the image. The overall visual impression is of a recurring daily cycle where CO2 levels rise significantly during certain times (likely daytime hours) and drop to lower baseline levels at other times. This description was generated automatically. Please feel free to ask questions if you have further questions about the nature of the image or its meaning within the presentation.