Search results for "dynamics"

showing 10 items of 9782 documents

On the structural changes in the Brewer-Dobson circulation after 2000

2010

In this paper we present evidence that the observed increase in tropical upwelling after the year 2000 may be attributed to a change in the Brewer-Dobson circulation pattern. For this purpose, we use the concept of transit times derived from residual circulation trajectories and different in-situ measurements of ozone and nitrous dioxide. Observations from the Canadian midlatitude ozone profile record, probability density functions of in-situ N<sub>2</sub>O observations and a shift of the N<sub>2</sub>O-O<sub>3</sub> correlation slopes, taken together, indicate that the increased upwelling in the tropics after the year 2000 appears to have triggered an in…

Atmospheric ScienceOzoneTropicsResidualAtmospheric sciencesBrewer-Dobson circulationlcsh:QC1-999lcsh:Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundCirculation (fluid dynamics)chemistrylcsh:QD1-999ClimatologyMiddle latitudesEnvironmental scienceUpwellingStratospherelcsh:PhysicsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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Hygroscopic properties and water-soluble volume fraction of atmospheric particles in the diameter range from 50 nm to 3.8 μm during LACE 98

2002

[1] Hygroscopic properties of atmospheric aerosol particles in the Aitken, large, and giant particle range were studied during the Lindenberg Aerosol Characterization Experiment (LACE 98) in a rural area 80 km southeast of Berlin. The hygroscopic behavior of Aitken particles were determined in situ in four size classes (50, 100, 150, 250 nm) with a Hygroscopic Tandem Differential Mobility Analyzer for relative humidities (RH) of 60% and 90%. Measurements at 60% RH served as reference data used by other LACE 98 investigators for mass closure and radiative transfer calculations. In most cases, at 90% RH, the atmospheric particles could be classified into two groups (“more” and “less” hygrosco…

Atmospheric ScienceRange (particle radiation)Materials scienceEcologyAnalytical chemistryPaleontologySoil ScienceMineralogyForestryFraction (chemistry)Aquatic ScienceOceanographyAerosolGeophysicsVolume (thermodynamics)Space and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyDifferential mobility analyzerVolume fractionEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)ParticleParticle sizeEarth-Surface ProcessesWater Science and TechnologyJournal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
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Potential Vorticity Dynamics of Forecast Errors: A Quantitative Case Study

2018

Abstract Synoptic-scale error growth near the tropopause is investigated from a process-based perspective. Following previous work, a potential vorticity (PV) error tendency equation is derived and partitioned into individual contributions to yield insight into the processes governing error growth near the tropopause. Importantly, we focus here on the further amplification of preexisting errors and not on the origin of errors. The individual contributions to error growth are quantified in a case study of a 6-day forecast. In this case, localized mesoscale error maxima have formed by forecast day 2. These maxima organize into a wavelike pattern and reach the Rossby wave scale around forecast…

Atmospheric ScienceWork (thermodynamics)010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesDynamics (mechanics)Rossby wave01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmasPotential vorticityError analysis0103 physical sciencesApplied mathematicsTropopause0105 earth and related environmental sciencesMathematicsMonthly Weather Review
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Mechanisms of Banner Cloud Formation

2013

Abstract Banner clouds are clouds in the lee of steep mountains or sharp ridges. Their formation has previously been hypothesized as due to three different mechanisms: (i) vertical uplift in a lee vortex (which has a horizontal axis), (ii) adiabatic expansion along quasi-horizontal trajectories (the so-called Bernoulli effect), and (iii) a mixing cloud (i.e., condensation through mixing of two unsaturated air masses). In the present work, these hypotheses are tested and quantitatively evaluated against each other by means of large-eddy simulation. The model setup is chosen such as to represent idealized but prototypical conditions for banner cloud formation. In this setup the lee-vortex mec…

Atmospheric ScienceWork (thermodynamics)Meteorologymedia_common.quotation_subjectCondensationGeometryAsymmetryPlumeVortexBernoulli's principleAdiabatic processMixing (physics)Geologymedia_commonJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences
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An evaluation of the estimation of road traffic emission factors from tracer studies

2010

Road traffic emission factors (EFs) are one of the main sources of uncertainties in emission inventories; it is necessary to develop methods to reduce these uncertainties to manage air quality more efficiently. Recently an alternative method has been proposed to estimate the EFs. In that work the emission factors were estimated from a long term tracer study developed in Ho Chi Minh City (HCMC) Vietnam. A passive tracer was continuously emitted from a finite line source placed in one side of an urban street canyon. Simultaneously, the resulting tracer concentrations were monitored at the other side of the street. The results of this experiment were used to calculate the dispersion factors an…

Atmospheric Sciencemodel validationPart Ii010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesMeteorologyStreet CanyonsField010501 environmental sciencesComputational fluid dynamics01 natural sciencesLine sourceDispersion ModelsPollutant DispersionTRACER11. SustainabilityRange (statistics)Statistical dispersionEmission inventoryAir quality index0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental ScienceWind tunneltracer studiesFlowbusiness.industrystreet canyon[SHS.GEO]Humanities and Social Sciences/GeographyAir-QualityParticles13. Climate actionEnvironmental scienceWind-TunnelbusinessSimulationreal-world motor vehicle emissionsComputational Fluids Dynamics (CFD)
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A predictive model for salt nanoparticle formation using heterodimer stability calculations

2021

Acid–base clusters and stable salt formation are critical drivers of new particle formation events in the atmosphere. In this study, we explore salt heterodimer (a cluster of one acid and one base) stability as a function of gas-phase acidity, aqueous-phase acidity, heterodimer proton transference, vapor pressure, dipole moment and polarizability for salts comprised of sulfuric acid, methanesulfonic acid and nitric acid with nine bases. The best predictor of heterodimer stability was found to be gas-phase acidity. We then analyzed the relationship between heterodimer stability and J4×4, the theoretically predicted formation rate of a four-acid, four-base cluster, for sulfuric acid salts ove…

Atmospheric Sciencesuolat010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesVapor pressureQC1-999Salt (chemistry)Thermodynamics01 natural sciencesMethanesulfonic acidilmakemiachemistry.chemical_compoundNitric acid0103 physical sciencesSulfateQD1-9990105 earth and related environmental scienceschemistry.chemical_classificationaerosolit010304 chemical physicsPhysicsSulfuric acidChemistryMonomerchemistrynanoparticlesnanohiukkasetAcid–base reaction
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New European Wind Atlas: Microscale Atlas

2021

Wind Atlas layers from the New European Wind Atlas (NEWA) microscale atlas. The atlas was made by downscaling the NEWA mesoscale wind atlas using the Wind Atlas Analysis and Application Program (WAsP) microscale model.Data are accessible through doWIND, an instance of daTap (RESTfull API for data aggregation and subsetting)

Atmospheric dynamicsElectrical energy generation (incl. renewables excl. photovoltaics)Atmospheric sciences not elsewhere classified
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Une méthode rapide et simple pour l'estimation de la position de la courbe de dissociation de l'oxyhémoglobine

1989

The methods currently available for assessing the oxyhaemoglobin dissociation curve parameters are expensive, lengthy, require a large volume of blood, and the results obtained are modified by anaesthetic gases. The equipment required for the method described includes: a microtonometre, microcuvettes, 3 gas bottles containing different oxygen, carbon dioxide and nitrogen mixtures (4.5%, 5.6%, 89.9%; 3.5%, 5.6%, 90.9%; 2.5%, 5.6%, 91.9% respectively), a microxymetre, and a micropHmetre. The samples in the microcuvettes are incubated at 37 degrees C in a gas flow of 45 ml.min-1 from the bottles. SO2 is then read using the microxymetre. P50, i.e. PO2 at 50% saturation, is calculated, as well a…

Atmospheric pressureAnalytical chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementOxygen–haemoglobin dissociation curveGeneral MedicinePartial pressureNitrogenOxygenchemistry.chemical_compoundAnesthesiology and Pain MedicinechemistryVolume (thermodynamics)Carbon dioxideSaturation (chemistry)Annales Françaises d'Anesthésie et de Réanimation
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Surface tension and density of binary mixtures of monoalcohols, water and acetonitrile: equation of correlation of the surface tension

2009

Measurements of the surface tension (σ) and density (ρ) of binary mixtures of monoalcohols, water and acetonitrile at 298.15 K and at atmospheric pressure, as a function of mole fraction (x) have been made. The experimental values of the deviation of surface tension and the excess of molar volume (Δσ, V E) have been correlated by the Redlich–Kister equation. An empirical correlation equation is presented for the study of the surface tension of these mixtures, and comparisons are made of the experimental values of surface tension versus those obtained with the correlation equation and with other models of correlation. Finally, with the purpose of corroborating the validity of the correlation…

Atmospheric pressureChemistryBinary numberThermodynamicsFunction (mathematics)Condensed Matter PhysicsMole fractionElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsSurface tensionsymbols.namesakechemistry.chemical_compoundGibbs isothermMolar volumeMaterials ChemistrysymbolsPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryAcetonitrilePhysics and Chemistry of Liquids
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Viscosity and density of binary mixtures of alcohols and polyols with three carbon atoms and water: equation for the correlation of viscosities of bi…

2009

Measurements have been made of the viscosity and density of binary mixtures of alcohols and polyols with three carbon atoms and water at 298.15 K and at atmospheric pressure, as a function of the mole fraction. Fits have been made of the experimental values corresponding to the excesses of molar volume (V E), the deviations of viscosity (Δη), and the excesses of Gibbs free energy of activation (G* E), by means of the Redlich–Kister equation. A new correlation equation is presented for studying the viscosity of such mixtures, and comparisons are made of the experimental values of viscosity versus the values obtained by means of the mentioned equation and the models of Heric and McAllister. L…

Atmospheric pressureRelative viscositychemistry.chemical_elementBinary numberThermodynamicsCondensed Matter PhysicsMole fractionElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsGibbs free energysymbols.namesakeViscosityMolar volumechemistryMaterials ChemistrysymbolsPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryCarbonPhysics and Chemistry of Liquids
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