Stochastic Models of Air Pollutant Concentration

Stochastic Models of Air Pollutant Concentration

by Jan Grandell
Stochastic Models of Air Pollutant Concentration

Stochastic Models of Air Pollutant Concentration

by Jan Grandell

Paperback(1985)

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Overview

About fifteen years ago Henning Rodhe and I disscussed the calculation of residence times, or lifetimes, of certain air pollutants for the first time. He was interested in pollutants which were mainly removed from the atmosphere by precipitation scavenging. His idea was to base the calculation on statistical models for the variation of the precipitation i~tensity and not only on the average precipitation intensity. In order to illustrate the importance of taking the variation into account we considered a simple model - here called the Markov model - for the precipitation intensity and computed the distribution of the residence time of an aerosol particle. Our expression for the average residence time - here formula (13- was rather much used by meteorologists. Certainly we were pleased, but while our ambition had been to provide an illustration, our work was merely understood as a proposal for a realistic model. Therefore we found it natural to search for more general models. The mathematical problems involved were the origin of my interest in this field. A brief outline of the background, purpose and content of this paper is given in section 1. It is a pleasure to thank Gunnar Englund, Georg Lindgren, Henning Rodhe and Michael Stein for their substantial help in the preparation of this paper and Iren Patricius for her assistance in typing.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780387961972
Publisher: Springer New York
Publication date: 10/03/1985
Series: Lecture Notes in Statistics , #30
Edition description: 1985
Pages: 120
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.36(d)

Table of Contents

1 Introduction.- 2 Some basic probability.- 3 The general model.- 4 Residence times and mean concentrations.- 5 The variance of the concentration.- 6 The Gibbs and Slinn approximation.- 7 Precipitation scavenging.- 8 The concentration process.- A1 Inequalities for the mean concentration.- A2 Conditions for E(c’(t))=0.- A3 Approximations for “long-lived” particles.- A4 Models with dependent sink and source.- A5 Proof of formula (38).- References.- Index of references.- Index of notation.
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