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Atmospheric chemistry introduction

Garrels, R. M. (1982). Introduction chemistry of the troposphere - some problems and their temporal frameworks. In "Atmospheric Chemistry" (E. D. Goldberg, ed.), Dahlem Konferenzen, pp. 3-16. Springer-Verlag, New York. [Pg.340]

Volume 22 Joseph W. Chamberlain. Theory of Volume 38 Planetary Atmospheres An Introduction to Their Physics and Volume 39 Chemistry. 1978 ... [Pg.526]

Chamberlain J.W. and Hunten D.M. (1986). Theory of Planetary Atmospheres An Introduction to Their Physics and Chemistry, International Geophysics Series. Academic Press, San Diego, 481 pp. [Pg.521]

Jacob, Daniel J. (1999). Introduction to Atmospheric Chemistry. Princeton, NJ Princeton University Press. [Pg.145]

Abstract An overview of the gas-phase reactions responsible for the photooxidation of air pollutants is provided. Starting with an introduction to the field of atmospheric chemistry we proceed to discuss the concept, and utility, of atmospheric lifetime. The processes responsible for the degradation of alkanes, alkenes, aromatics, NO, SO, CFCs and their replacements are discussed in turn. Areas of uncertainty are highlighted. Finally, the research needs are discussed. [Pg.119]

From time to time the broad front of advance in any field is pierced by significantly greater and more important developments in some subareas. Recent developments in laser technology, mass spectrometry, and molecular beam studies have made that the case for the properties and reactions of excited states of simple atoms and molecules. This volume of the Advances in Chemical Physics is, therefore, devoted to a collection of contributions that are relevant to aspects of the physics and chemistry of excited species. The articles cover topics as diverse as theoretical estimation of potential energy, surface properties, and upper atmosphere chemistry, but all are tied together by the common denominator of the need to understand the properties of the excited states of molecules. It is hoped that this and succeeding volumes will supplement the rather broadly scattered literature, and provide an introduction for both the interested student and the working scientist. [Pg.499]

J.R. Barker, A brief introduction to atmospheric chemistry, in J.R. Barker (Ed.), Progress and Problems in Atmospheric Chemistry, World Scientific, Singapore, 1995, pp. 1-33. [Pg.41]

Andreae, M. O., J. Fishman, and J. Lindesay. 1996. The Southern Tropical Atlantic Region Experiment (STARE) TRansport and Atmospheric Chemistry near the Equator-Atlantic (TRACE-A) and Southern African Fire/ Atmosphere Research Initiative (SAFARI) An introduction. Journal of Geophysical Research 101 23519-23520. [Pg.51]

Planetary Atmospheres An Introduction to Their Physics and Chemistry. 1978 ... [Pg.379]

Daniel X Jacob Introduction to atmospheric chemistry. Princeton University Press, 264 pp. [Pg.587]

Peter V. Hobbs Introduction to atmospheric chemistry. A companion text to basic physical chemistry for the atmospheric sciences. Cambridge University Press, 206 pp. [Pg.587]

Wayne, R, P, (2000) Chemistry of atmospheres. An introduction to the chemistry of the atmospheres of earth, the planets, and their sateUites, Third Edition, Oxford University Press, 808 pp,... [Pg.686]

Ahrens, C. Donald, and Perry Samson, Extreme Weather and Climate, Brooks/Cole, Belmont, CA, 2010. AUaby, Michael, Atmosphere A Scientific History of Air, Weather, and Climate, Facts on File, New York, 2009. Barker, John. R., A Brief Introduction to Atmospheric Chemistry, Advances Series in Physical Chemistry 3, 1-33 (1995). [Pg.179]

Hobbs, Peter V., Introduction to Atmospheric Chemistry, Cambridge University Press, New York, 2000. Holloway, Ann M., and Richard P. Wayne, Atmospheric Chemistry, RSC PubUshing, Cambridge, UK, 2010. Jacob, Daniel J., Introduction to Atmospheric Chemistry, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1999. Jolliffe, Ian T., and David B. Stephenson, Forecast Verification A Practitioner s Guide in Atmospheric Science, Wiley, Hoboken, NJ, 2012. [Pg.179]

This chapter serves as an introduction to atmospheric chemistry. It provides an overview of the development of the field, fi om the dawn of modem chemistry to the birth of atmospheric chemistry. Section 1.3 lists the textbooks on chemistry of the atmosphere and atmospheric chemistry that have been published to date. In addition, the literature that served as reference in the writing of this chapter is also listed at the end of this chapter under the bibliography. [Pg.2]


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