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         Ozone Meteorology:     more books (100)
  1. Atmospheric Ozone
  2. Tropospheric Ozone Research: Tropospheric Ozone in the Regional and Sub-regional Context (Transport and Chemical Transformation of Pollutants in the Troposphere)
  3. The Tropospheric Chemistry of Ozone in the Polar Regions (Nato a S I Series Series I, Global Environmental Change) by H. Niki, K. H. Becker, 1993-07
  4. Atmospheric Ozone Dynamics: Observations in the Mediterranean Region (NATO ASI Series / Global Environmental Change)
  5. Chemical Processes in Atmospheric Oxidation: Laboratory Studies of Chemistry Related to Troposheric Ozone (Transport and Chemical Transformation of Pollutants in the Troposphere) (Vol 3)
  6. Tropospheric Ozone: Human Health and Agricultural Impacts by David McKee, 1993-10-25
  7. Nocturnal trans-alpine transport of ozone and its effects on air quality on the Swiss Plateau [An article from: Atmospheric Environment] by M. Steinbacher, S. Henne, et all 2004-09-01
  8. Ozone Depletion, Greenhouse Gases, and Climate Change by Board on Atmospheric Sciences and Climate, Committee on Global Change, et all 1989-01-01
  9. Review of the U.S. Climate Change Science Program's Draft Synthesis and Assessment Product 2.4: Trends in Emissions of Ozone Depleting Substances, Ozone ... for Ultraviolet Radiation Exposure by Committee to Review the U.S. Climate Change Science Program's Draft Synthesis and Assessment Product 2.4, National Research Council, 2007-12-04
  10. Atlas of total ozone distribution: October 1958-September 1959 (Publication in meteorology - McGill University. Arctic Meteorology Research Group) by V MacDonald, 1963
  11. A stratospheric general circulation experiment, incorporating diabatic heating and ozone photochemistry (McGill University, Montreal. Arctic Meteorology Research Group. Publication in meteorology) by R Byron-Scott, 1967
  12. Photochemical production of ozone in western Europe and its relation to meteorology by R Guicherit, 1976
  13. Origin of ozone NO[subscript x] in the tropical troposphere a photochemical analysis of aircraft observations over the South Atlantic basin (SuDoc NAS 1.26:207268) by NASA, 1996
  14. Analysis of atmospheric ozone measurements made from a B-747 airliner during March 1975 (NASA technical note ; NASA TN D-8311) by J. D Holdeman, 1976

81. UV Index (UVI) Map: World, US, Australia, New Zealand. UV Intensity. SafeSun UV
Updated daily. From SafeSun.Category News Weather UV Index...... level must take into account information on the time, date, latitude, cloud, altitude,haze and ozone concentrations. The Bureau of meteorology worked with the
http://www.safesun.com/uv_map.html
UV Intensity maps
SafeSun , Personal UV meter
measures UV intensity in UV Index (UVI) units.
UV maps may load slowly. At times, some maps will be unavailable. They are all taken from remote servers. Updated daily.
UVI world map
Because of problems with TOMS, the freshest is from Dec 31, 2000
This map is provided courtesy of the Socioeconomic Data and Applications Center ( SEDAC
The Center for International Earth Science Information Network ( CIESIN ) at Columbia University has been designated by NASA to operate and maintain SEDAC. Data Description: This map represents local noon near-real time estimates of the UV Index (UVI) using total column ozone abundances measured by NASA's Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) carried by the Earth Probe satellite. Cloud cover is not incorporated. TOMS news
UVI US map
This map is provided courtesy of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ( NOAA ) and the Environmental Protection Agency ( EPA
Data Description:
Australia UVI forecast
This map is provided courtesy of the Commonwealth Bureau of Meteorology , Australia.

82. Cooperative Research Centres (CRC) - Southern Hemisphere Meteorology
This Centre is a major worldclass centre for meteorology research and graduatetraining, with three research programs ozone; Transport Modelling; and
http://www.crc.gov.au/centres/Old_CRCs/shm.htm
Melbourne (VIC) Sydney (NSW)
Core Participants: Industry: Silicon Graphics Pty Ltd. University: Monash University. Commonwealth: Bureau of Meteorology; CSIRO, Atmospheric Research. Research Focus Areas of Research Expertise Dynamical meteorology, atmospheric chemistry and physics, numerical weather and climate modelling, atmospheric general circulation, stratospheric dynamics, data analysis and inverse methods. Centre Established: 1 July 1993
Round No:
Grant Period:
7 Years
I ncorporated: No Personnel involved in Centre
Postgraduate students 31
Full-time equivalent research staff 27 Funding 1999/00 dollars
($ million) Average Funding
per annum Total Funding over Grant period CRC Program Funding Total Resources for Centre
Contact Details Chair:
Professor John M Swan Professor David Karoly
Director
CRC for Southern Hemisphere Meteorology 3rd Floor, Building 70 Monash University Wellington Road CLAYTON VIC 3168 Tel: (03) 9905 9669 Fax: (03) 9905 9689 E-mail: crc@vortex.shm.monash.edu.au

83. Meteorology
Copyright ©1998 The McGrawHill Companies. All rights reserved. Any use is subject to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. For further information about this site contact mhhe_webmaster@mcgraw-hill.com.
http://www.mhhe.com/earthsci/geology/danielson
and
For further information about this site contact mhhe_webmaster@mcgraw-hill.com . McGraw-Hill Higher Education is one of the many fine businesses of The McGraw-Hill Companies

84. Uncoupling Meteorology From Ozone--One Approach
Uncoupling meteorology from OzoneOne Approach. Classify days by meteorologicalconditionstemperature, wind speed, wind direction (binning).
http://www.ladco.org/monitor/ozone_trends/tsld003.htm
Uncoupling Meteorology from OzoneOne Approach
  • Classify days by meteorological conditionstemperature, wind speed, wind direction (binning)
  • Focus on ozone conducive conditions
  • Log-transform data (comes closer to normality, and trends can be interpreted as % change/year)
  • Examine trends on similar days by regression
  • Limit analysis to single day episodes and first day of multi-day episodes
Previous slide Next slide Back to first slide View graphic version

85. Uncoupling Meteorology From Ozone--One Approach
First Previous Next Last Index Home Text. Slide 3 of 34.
http://www.ladco.org/monitor/ozone_trends/sld003.htm

86. CABO - Climate And Background Ozone Research Group
by the British Council (London) to start in 1991 - her research on meteorologyand ozone under the supervision of Professor Trevor D. Davies, Professor
http://www.giub.unibe.ch/~evi/cabo/
CABO - Climate and Background Ozone
Research Group
Swiss-British Collaboration
Jungfraujoch Studies TROTREP ACCORD ... Publications Oldies Evi on 'Graduation Day', 1995 at UEA, together with Professor Stuart A. Penkett (UEA-ENV, Norwich, U.K.) CABO trip to the Swiss Meteorological Institute at Locarno-Monti, autumn 1996 News MOWIS - Mentoring Of Women In Science - a pilot project at Berne University in the framework of LEONARDO DA VINCI Zanis, P., P.S. Monks, E. Schuepbach, L.J. Carpenter, T.J. Green, G.P. Mills, S. Bauguitte, and S.A. Penkett, 2000: In-situ ozone production rate and the ozone compensation point during FREETEX '98 at the Jungfraujoch in the Swiss Alps. J. Geophys. Res. 105(D19), 24,223-24,234. Carpenter L.J., T. Green, G. Mills, S. Bauguitte, S.A. Penkett, P. Zanis, E. Schuepbach, N. Schmidbauer, P.S. Monks, C. Zellweger, 2000: Oxidised nitrogen and ozone production efficiencies in the springtime free troposphere over the Alps. J. Geophys. Res., 105(D11), 14,547-14,559. Broennimann S., E. Schuepbach, P. Zanis, B. Buchmann, and H. Wanner, 2000: A climatology of regional background ozone at different elevations in Switzerland (1992-1998).

87. References
Bloomfield, P., Royle, A. and Yang, Q. (1993). Rural ozone and meteorologyanalysis and comparison with urban ozone. Technical
http://www.cgd.ucar.edu/stats/web.book/BOOK/node12.html
Next: Online datasets and software Up: Modeling Ozone in the Previous: Overview of the Case
References
Bates, D.M. and Watts, D.G. (1988). Nonlinear Regression Analysis and its Applications . Wiley, New York. Becker, R.A., Chambers, J.M. and Wilks, A.R. (1988). The New S Language: A Programming Environment for Data Analysis and Graphics. Wadsworth and Brooks/Cole, Pacific Grove, CA. Bloomfield, P., Royle, A. and Yang, Q. (1993). Rural ozone and meteorology: analysis and comparison with urban ozone. Technical Report 5. National Institute of Statistical Sciences, Research Triangle Park, NC. Bloomfield, P., Royle, A., Steinberg, L.J. and Yang, Q. (1996). Accounting for meteorological effects in measuring urban ozone levels and trends. Atmospheric Environment Chambers, J.M. and Hastie, T.J. (eds.) (1993). Statistical Models in S Cox, W. M. and Chu, S.-H. (1993). Meteorologically adjusted ozone trends in urban areas: A probabilistic approach. Atmospheric Environment Davison, A.C. and Smith, R.L. (1990). Models for exceedances over high thresholds (with discussion). Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, series B

88. The East Tennessee Ozone Study (ETOS)
A case in point is shown. The day in question was one of ozone exceedance. Onsitemeteorology would have said that the origin lay to the southwest.
http://www.arl.noaa.gov/milestn/mile4.html
The East Tennessee Ozone Study (ETOS)
Phase 1 of the Appalachian Highland Ozone Exceedance Prediction Program The summer of 1998 produced alarming headlines in Knoxville papers. The Knoxville News Sentinel reported that "Air Quality at Clingman's Dome Reaches Danger Level" and "Smoky's Air Quality Setting Worst Records." During the summer of 1998, air monitoring stations in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park recorded the highest-ever eight-hour average ozone exposures. By late August, the National Park Service reported the 25 th day of unhealthy ozone conditions for 1998.
The problem: High altitude regions of the Appalachians, from Georgia to New York, are increasingly affected by ozone exceedances. We risk losing access to the Appalachian National parks and other elevated areas, for asthmatics and others with breathing disorders. Moreover, sensitive components of the ecosystem are increasingly affected. Access to parks might be limited on occasions when extremely high concentrations of ozone are expected.
Data from Cove Mountain in Tennessee illustrate the problem. The figures shown (for July and August 1995) are not selected to show anything unusual. Rather, they show what is expected to be a typical wind direction dependence for occasions with high ozone concentrations.

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