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Two Reasons Why Pollution Dispersion Modeling Needs Sesquilinear Forms

In: Integral Methods in Science and Engineering

Author

Listed:
  • D. L. Gisch

    (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul)

  • B. E. J. Bodmann

    (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul)

  • M. T. B. Vilhena

    (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul)

Abstract

Atmospheric dispersion modeling is nowadays a valuable tool that permits to simulate how air pollutants affect the ambient atmosphere. Models are not only used to estimate the downwind concentration of pollutant substances but also allow to reproduce the full three-dimensional pollutant distributions over time, while measurements are typically acquired by a small set of detection locations, only (Pellegrini et al., American Journal of Environmental Engineering 3:48–55, 2013; Buske et al., Journal of Environmental Protection 3:1124–1134, 2012; Tirabassi et al., Atmosphere 2:21–35, 2011). Nowadays, governmental agencies for ambient air quality protection and management employ such models in order to determine whether existing or planned emission sources are in compliance with ambient air quality standards.

Suggested Citation

  • D. L. Gisch & B. E. J. Bodmann & M. T. B. Vilhena, 2015. "Two Reasons Why Pollution Dispersion Modeling Needs Sesquilinear Forms," Springer Books, in: Christian Constanda & Andreas Kirsch (ed.), Integral Methods in Science and Engineering, edition 1, chapter 0, pages 257-266, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-319-16727-5_22
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-16727-5_22
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