Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 BASICS AND HISTORY OF DISCOVERY OF ATMOSPHERIC CHEMICALS
- 2 THE SUN, THE EARTH, AND THE EVOLUTION OF THE EARTH'S ATMOSPHERE
- 3 STRUCTURE AND COMPOSITION OF THE PRESENT-DAY ATMOSPHERE
- 4 URBAN AIR POLLUTION
- 5 AEROSOL PARTICLES IN SMOG AND THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT
- 6 EFFECTS OF METEOROLOGY ON AIR POLLUTION
- 7 EFFECTS OF POLLUTION ON VISIBILITY, ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION, AND ATMOSPHERIC OPTICS
- 8 INTERNATIONAL REGULATION OF URBAN SMOG SINCE THE 1940s
- 9 INDOOR AIR POLLUTION
- 10 ACID DEPOSITION
- 11 GLOBAL STRATOSPHERIC OZONE REDUCTION
- 12 THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT AND GLOBAL WARMING
- Appendix: Conversions and Constants
- References
- Photograph Sources
- Index
6 - EFFECTS OF METEOROLOGY ON AIR POLLUTION
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 BASICS AND HISTORY OF DISCOVERY OF ATMOSPHERIC CHEMICALS
- 2 THE SUN, THE EARTH, AND THE EVOLUTION OF THE EARTH'S ATMOSPHERE
- 3 STRUCTURE AND COMPOSITION OF THE PRESENT-DAY ATMOSPHERE
- 4 URBAN AIR POLLUTION
- 5 AEROSOL PARTICLES IN SMOG AND THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT
- 6 EFFECTS OF METEOROLOGY ON AIR POLLUTION
- 7 EFFECTS OF POLLUTION ON VISIBILITY, ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION, AND ATMOSPHERIC OPTICS
- 8 INTERNATIONAL REGULATION OF URBAN SMOG SINCE THE 1940s
- 9 INDOOR AIR POLLUTION
- 10 ACID DEPOSITION
- 11 GLOBAL STRATOSPHERIC OZONE REDUCTION
- 12 THE GREENHOUSE EFFECT AND GLOBAL WARMING
- Appendix: Conversions and Constants
- References
- Photograph Sources
- Index
Summary
In this chapter, the effects of meteorology on air pollution are discussed. The concentrations of gases and aerosol particles are affected by winds, temperatures, vertical temperature profiles, clouds, and the relative humidity. These meteorological parameters are influenced by large-and small-scale weather systems. Large-scale weather systems are controlled by large-scale regions of high and low pressure. Small-scale weather systems are controlled by ground temperatures and small-scale variations in pressure. The first section of the chapter examines the forces acting on air. The second section examines how forces combine to form winds. The third section discusses how radiation, coupled with forces and the rotation of the Earth, generates the global circulation of the atmosphere. Sections 6.4 and 6.5 discuss the two major types of large-scale pressure systems. Section 6.6 discusses the effects of such pressure systems on air pollution. The last section focuses on the effects of local meteorology on air pollution.
FORCES
Winds arise due to forces acting on the air. Next, the major forces are described.
Pressure Gradient Force
When high air pressure exists in one location and low pressure exists nearby, air moves from high to low pressure. The force causing this motion is the pressure gradient force (PGF). The force is proportional to the difference in pressure divided by the distance between the two locations and always acts from high to low pressure.
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- Atmospheric PollutionHistory, Science, and Regulation, pp. 145 - 178Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
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