Proceedings Frontiers in Education 1997 27th Annual Conference. Teaching and Learning in an Era of Change
DOI: 10.1109/fie.1997.644899
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Distance education-sources and control of air pollution

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Cited by 15 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…The ground level of pollutant concentration is namely a continuous function along x and y and its distribution has an asymmetric bell-shape with a single maximum value. Such a maximum exists, since at locations to the stack the plume is still overhead and the ground-level concentration is zero, while at great distance from the stack the concentration approaches zero, as the plume becomes diluted with ambient air (see also Heinsohn and Kabel, 1999). Secondly, with a higher H the maximum concentration takes place farther from the stack along x and its value gets lower compared to the case with a lower one.…”
Section: Market Area Model With One Pollutermentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…The ground level of pollutant concentration is namely a continuous function along x and y and its distribution has an asymmetric bell-shape with a single maximum value. Such a maximum exists, since at locations to the stack the plume is still overhead and the ground-level concentration is zero, while at great distance from the stack the concentration approaches zero, as the plume becomes diluted with ambient air (see also Heinsohn and Kabel, 1999). Secondly, with a higher H the maximum concentration takes place farther from the stack along x and its value gets lower compared to the case with a lower one.…”
Section: Market Area Model With One Pollutermentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Although a clear-cut classification can hardly be made, dispersion in the vertical direction appears to be more distinctively affected by the buoyant turbulence caused by different atmospheric conditions (day or night, heat flux, thermal structure, etc. ), while dispersion in the horizontal plane is likely to be more significantly determined by molecular and eddy diffusion triggered by the prevailing wind (Csanady, 1972;Berljand, 1982;Baumbach, 1994;Heinsohn and Kabel, 1999;Koop and Tole, 2004). In the following the x-axis will always be oriented in the direction of wind, the z-axis is vertically upward, and the y-axis is transverse to the wind (i.e.…”
Section: Major Characteristics Of Gaussian Plume Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In deriving the model certain simplifying assumptions were made. Natural extensions of the model arise through relaxing some of these assumptions: for instance, a height dependent wind velocity could be included ( [12], p386, p413), or a height dependent diffusivity ( [13], p593) and, rather than using a point source, a more realistic term for the particle concentration at the chimney opening could be added.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%