The Theory of Dispersion Models

The Theory of Dispersion Models

Author: Bent Jorgensen

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 1997-06-01

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 9780412997112

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The theory of dispersion models straddles both statistics and probability, and involves an encyclopedic collection of tools, such as exponential families, asymptotic theory, stochastic processes, Tauber theory, infinite divisibility, and stable distributions. The Theory of Dispersion Models introduces the reader to these models, which serve as error distributions for generalized linear models, and looks at their applications within this context.


Air Dispersion Modeling

Air Dispersion Modeling

Author: Alex De Visscher

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2013-09-26

Total Pages: 526

ISBN-13: 1118723104

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

A single reference to all aspects of contemporary air dispersion modeling The practice of air dispersion modeling has changed dramatically in recent years, in large part due to new EPA regulations. Current with the EPA's 40 CFR Part 51, this book serves as a complete reference to both the science and contemporary practice of air dispersion modeling. Throughout the book, author Alex De Visscher guides readers through complex calculations, equation by equation, helping them understand precisely how air dispersion models work, including such popular models as the EPA's AERMOD and CALPUFF. Air Dispersion Modeling begins with a primer that enables readers to quickly grasp basic principles by developing their own air dispersion model. Next, the book offers everything readers need to work with air dispersion models and accurately interpret their results, including: Full chapter dedicated to the meteorological basis of air dispersion Examples throughout the book illustrating how theory translates into practice Extensive discussions of Gaussian, Lagrangian, and Eulerian air dispersion modeling Detailed descriptions of the AERMOD and CALPUFF model formulations This book also includes access to a website with Microsoft Excel and MATLAB files that contain examples of air dispersion model calculations. Readers can work with these examples to perform their own calculations. With its comprehensive and up-to-date coverage, Air Dispersion Modeling is recommended for environmental engineers and meteorologists who need to perform and evaluate environmental impact assessments. The book's many examples and step-by-step instructions also make it ideal as a textbook for students in the fields of environmental engineering, meteorology, chemical engineering, and environmental sciences.


Air Pollution Modeling and Its Application XII

Air Pollution Modeling and Its Application XII

Author: Sven-Erik Gryning

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2013-11-11

Total Pages: 739

ISBN-13: 1475791283

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Proceedings of the Twenty-Second NATO/CCMS International Technical Meeting held in Clermont-Ferrand, France, June 2-6, 1997


Atmospheric Dispersion Modelling

Atmospheric Dispersion Modelling

Author: Rod Barratt

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2013-11-05

Total Pages: 265

ISBN-13: 1134194978

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

To comply with legal and other standards, businesses and regulators are increasingly required to make decisions based on risk assessments of the potential effects of their activities on the environment. Atmospheric dispersion modelling is a cost-effective method, allowing various scenarios to be explored before expensive investment takes place. This guide offers advice on this environmental management tool. Unlike much of the previous literature, it doesn't focus excessively on the mathematical theory behind the modelling or on modelling for specific regulatory purposes. Instead, it offers an understanding of the background to the methodologies, providing exercises to develop the skills to carry these out and including examples of the use of commercially available models to enable the reader to assess the results of modelling for risk assessment.


Air Pollution Modeling

Air Pollution Modeling

Author: P. Zannetti

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2013-06-29

Total Pages: 448

ISBN-13: 147574465X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Finishing this book is giving me a mixture of relief, satisfaction and frus tration. Relief, for the completion of a project that has taken too many of my evenings and weekends and that, in the last several months, has become almost an obsession. Satisfaction, for the optimistic feeling that this book, in spite of its many shortcomings and imbalances, will be of some help to the air pollution scientific community. Frustration, for the impossibility of incorporating newly available material that would require another major review of several key chap ters - an effort that is currently beyond my energies but not beyond my desires. The first canovaccio of this book came out in 1980 when I was invited by Computational Mechanics in the United Kingdom to give my first Air Pollution Modeling course. The course material, in the form of transparencies, expanded, year after year, thus providing a growing working basis. In 1985, the ECC Joint Research Center in Ispra, Italy, asked me to prepare a critical survey of mathe matical models of atmospheric pollution, transport and deposition. This support gave me the opportunity to prepare a sort of "first draft" of the book, which I expanded in the following years.


Information and Exponential Families

Information and Exponential Families

Author: O. Barndorff-Nielsen

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2014-05-07

Total Pages: 248

ISBN-13: 1118857372

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

First published by Wiley in 1978, this book is being re-issued with a new Preface by the author. The roots of the book lie in the writings of RA Fisher both as concerns results and the general stance to statistical science, and this stance was the determining factor in the author's selection of topics. His treatise brings together results on aspects of statistical information, notably concerning likelihood functions, plausibility functions, ancillarity, and sufficiency, and on exponential families of probability distributions.


Fundamentals of Stack Gas Dispersion

Fundamentals of Stack Gas Dispersion

Author: Milton R. Beychok

Publisher: Milton R Beychok

Published: 1994

Total Pages: 193

ISBN-13: 9780964458802

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This is the new, fourth edition of the book on dispersion modeling of continuous, buoyant air pollution plumes which takes nothing for granted. Every equation is completely derived step-by-step without any complicated or advanced mathematics. Every constraint and assumption is fully explained. A set of self-study exercises is also included with the book.The subjects covered in the book include atmospheric turbulence and stability classes, buoyant plume rise, Gaussian dispersion calculations and modeling, time-averaged concentrations, wind velocity profiles, fumigations, trapped plumes, flare stack plumes and much more ... with a great many example calculations. Copies of the book have been purchased in the U.S.A., Canada, Mexico, South America, Europe, Australia, Africa and Asia (in a total of 57 countries), and are available in over 130 libraries worldwide. The book has been very widely referenced and cited in the technical literature and on the Internet.


Wage Dispersion

Wage Dispersion

Author: Dale Mortensen

Publisher: MIT Press

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 170

ISBN-13: 9780262633192

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

A theoretical and empirical examination of wage differentials findsthat traditional theories of competition do not explain why workers with identical skills are paid differently.


Selected Works of E. L. Lehmann

Selected Works of E. L. Lehmann

Author: Javier Rojo

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-01-16

Total Pages: 1103

ISBN-13: 1461414113

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

These volumes present a selection of Erich L. Lehmann’s monumental contributions to Statistics. These works are multifaceted. His early work included fundamental contributions to hypothesis testing, theory of point estimation, and more generally to decision theory. His work in Nonparametric Statistics was groundbreaking. His fundamental contributions in this area include results that came to assuage the anxiety of statisticians that were skeptical of nonparametric methodologies, and his work on concepts of dependence has created a large literature. The two volumes are divided into chapters of related works. Invited contributors have critiqued the papers in each chapter, and the reprinted group of papers follows each commentary. A complete bibliography that contains links to recorded talks by Erich Lehmann – and which are freely accessible to the public – and a list of Ph.D. students are also included. These volumes belong in every statistician’s personal collection and are a required holding for any institutional library.