Cit:Steiger.etal:1989
Autor | Steiger, M. and Schulz, M. and Schwikowski, M. and Naumann, K. and Dannecker, W. |
Jahr | 1989 |
Titel | Variability of aerosol size distributions above the North Sea and its implication to dry deposition estimates |
Bibtex | @article{STEIGER19891229,
title = {Variability of aerosol size distributions above the North Sea and its implication to dry deposition estimates}, journal = {Journal of Aerosol Science}, volume = {20}, number = {8}, pages = {1229-1232}, year = {1989}, note = {Proceedings of the 1989 European Aerosol Research}, issn = {0021-8502}, doi = {https://doi.org/10.1016/0021-8502(89)90804-5}, url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0021850289908045}, author = {M. Steiger and M. Schulz and M. Schwikowski and K. Naumann and W. Dannecker} } |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1016/0021-8502(89)90804-5 |
Link | https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/0021850289908045 |
Bemerkungen | in: Journal of Aerosol Science, Band 20, Nummer 8, S. 1229-1232 |
Eintrag in der Bibliographie
[Steiger.etal:1989] | Steiger, Michael; Schulz, Michael; Schwikowski, Margit; Naumann, K.; Dannecker, Walter (1989): Variability of aerosol size distributions above the North Sea and its implication to dry deposition estimates. In: Journal of Aerosol Science, 20 (8), 1229-1232 |
Abstract[Bearbeiten]
In order to estimate the atmospheric input of pollutants into coastal waters the removal mechanisms of dry and wet deposition have to be considered. Generally the latter one is assumed to be the more efficient sink process. However, since little is known about true rainfall amount at the open North Sea, the contribution of a continous dry deposition flux may also be of relevance, especially in the vicinity of the coast. Both removal processes are closely related to the aerosol size distribution and are preferentially depleting the mass in the largest size ranges. Thus particle size is considered to be a very important parameter for the characterization of airborne particles. We therefore started to measure ambient elemental size distributions at the research platform NORDSEE, which is located about 120 km apart from the coastline in the German Bight.