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Part 5. Human Activities

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Title: Part 5. Human Activities


1
Part 5. Human Activities
  • Chapter 14
  • Human Effects Air Pollution and Heat Islands

2
Introduction
  • Air pollutants are gases, liquids or solids in
    the air that can adversely affect plant and/or
    animal life
  • Primary pollutants are pollutants that are
    emitted directly by natural or anthropogenic
    (manmade) processes
  • Secondary pollutants are pollutants that arise
    from chemical reactions of atmospheric gases with
    gases emitted by natural or anthropogenic
    processes

3
Important Air Pollutants
  • Particulates (aerosols) are solid or liquid
    particles suspended in the air (from .1 to 100 mm
    in size)
  • Natural sources -- fires, volcanic eruptions,
    salt spray from the oceans, pollen, dust storms
  • Anthropogenic sources -- combustion of fossil
    fuels
  • PM10 (lt 10 mm) enters lungs (associated with
    asthma) PM2.5 even more dangerous (lung cancer)
  • Particulates stay in the atmosphere no more than
    a few years

4
  • Carbon oxides - COx
  • CO -- Carbon monoxide
  • Colorless, odorless gas from volcanic eruptions,
    forest fires, bacterial activities, fuel
    combustion
  • Dangerous to humans and animals in high
    concentrations
  • CO2 -- Carbon dioxide
  • Colorless, odorless gas from volcanic eruptions,
    forest fires, bacterial activities, fuel
    combustion
  • Is an important greenhouse gas in high
    concentrations can displace oxygen (CO2 is denser
    than O2)

5
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6
  • Sulphur oxides - SOx
  • Have both gaseous and aerosol forms
  • Natural sources are bacterial release, volcanic
    eruptions, sea spray
  • Anthropogenic sources are combustion of fossil
    fuels and ore smelting
  • SO2 is a respiratory irritant
  • SO3 contributes to acid fog and acid rain

7
Acid precipitation across North America
Factories and power plants in the midwest and
northeast contribute sulphur oxides to the air.
These pollutants cause acid rain downwind of
their sources of emission.
8
Acid deposition weathers monuments and buildings
Acid rain dissolves limestone components of
buildings.
9
  • Nitrogen oxides - NOx
  • Nitric oxide (NO) and Nitrogen dioxide (NO2)
  • Natural sources are biological processes in soil
    and water
  • Anthropogenic sources are fossil fuel combustion
  • NO2 is a toxic yellow to reddish-brown gas (like
    Los Angeles smog) that is pungent and corrosive
  • Can cause pulmonary health problems

10
Nitrogen dioxide pollution in Hong Kong
11
  • Volatile organic compounds or VOCs (hydrocarbons)
  • Methane, butane, propane, octane, gasoline, paint
    thinners, etc.
  • Natural sources are organic emissions and
    decomposition of organic matter
  • Anthropogenic sources are primarily combustion
    from automobiles, trucks, buses, and other fossil
    fuel motors also evaporation of gasoline and
    other chemicals
  • Combines with solar radiation to form Los
    Angeles-type photochemical smog ozone is a major
    secondary pollutant from VOCs
  • Ozone causes respiratory and heart problems

12
Photochemical smog in Los Angeles
13
U.S. Anthropogenic Air Pollution Sources Major
Sources -Fuel combustion (electricity generation
and heating) -Transportation -Industrial Processes
14
  • Atmospheric Controls on Air Pollution
  • High concentrations of pollutants in a small area
    (usually due to anthropogenic sources) are the
    biggest air pollution problems
  • The horizontal and vertical transport of air
    pollutants by winds help control the local
    concentrations of pollutants
  • Concentrations are inversely proportional to wind
    speed
  • Eddies can mix air vertically
  • Inversions can trap pollutants near the Earths
    surface

15
Effect of wind speed on pollution
Lower winds allow greater concentrations of
pollutants.
Greater winds reduce concentrations of pollutants
by spreading them faster and farther.
16
Smokestacks are designed to lift pollutants
17
U.S. pollution trends since 1977 Anthropogenic
pollution has been decreasing since the first
clean air laws were passed in the 1970s. Lead
was prohibited in gasoline in the mid 1970s.
18
  • Urban Heat Island effect -- cities have higher
    average temperatures at night than surrounding
    area
  • Causes of the urban heat island effect low
    albedo, low evaporation, IR radiation trapped by
    tall buildings, heat absorption by roads and
    other surfaces, few trees and plants, etc.
  • High particulate concentrations in cities reflect
    some sunlight and can stimulate downwind
    cloud/precipitation processes

19
City center is warmer than the surrounding
suburbs and countryside.
20
Effect of buildings on solar radiation receipt
21
Heat island magnitude varies with city population
22
End of Chapter 14 Understanding Weather and
Climate 4th EditionEdward Aguado and James E.
Burt
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