Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 12
pro vyhledávání: '"Steven L. Edburg"'
Autor:
Scott C. Herndon, Kuldeep R. Prasad, A. M. F. Heimburger, Brian H. Stirm, Joseph R. Roscioli, Thomas W. Ferrara, Paul B. Shepson, Kenneth J. Davis, Cody Floerchinger, David Lyon, Thomas Lauvaux, Maria Obiminda L Cambaliza, James R. Whetstone, O. E. Salmon, T. N. Lavoie, Steven L. Edburg, Scott J. Richardson, Natasha L. Miles, Brian Lamb
Publikováno v:
Environmental Science & Technology. 50:8910-8917
This paper describes process-based estimation of CH4 emissions from sources in Indianapolis, IN and compares these with atmospheric inferences of whole city emissions. Emissions from the natural gas distribution system were estimated from measurement
Autor:
Ethan Gutmann, Elise Pendall, David Gochis, Arjan J. H. Meddens, Jeffrey A. Hicke, Brent E. Ewers, Urszula Norton, Steven L. Edburg, Paul D. Brooks
Publikováno v:
The Bark Beetles, Fuels, and Fire Bibliography
Recent, large‐scale outbreaks of bark beetle infestations have affected millions of hectares of forest in western North America, covering an area similar in size to that impacted by fire. Bark beetles kill host trees in affected areas, thereby alte
The Effect of the Vertical Source Distribution on Scalar Statistics within and above a Forest Canopy
Publikováno v:
Boundary-Layer Meteorology. 142:365-382
Little is known about in-canopy processes that may alter forest–atmosphere exchanges of trace gases and aerosols. To improve our understanding of in-canopy mixing, we use large-eddy simulation to study the effect of scalar source/sink distributions
Autor:
Steven L. Edburg, David E. Stock, Holly Peterson, Brian Lamb, Gene Allwine, Harold W Thistle, Brian L. Strom
Publikováno v:
Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology. 49:1913-1926
Bark beetles kill millions of acres of trees in the United States annually by using chemical signaling to attack host trees en masse. As an attempt to control infestations, forest managers use synthetic semiochemical sources to attract beetles to tra
Autor:
Steven L. Edburg, Barbara J. Bond, Brian Lamb, Thomas G. Pypker, E. Allwine, Elizabeth W. Sulzman, Michael H. Unsworth, Alan C. Mix
Publikováno v:
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology. 145:149-166
Our objectives were to: characterize spatial and temporal variation in wind speed, direction and air temperature within a steeply sloping 96 ha forested watershed in the Oregon Cascade Mountains; assess the area contributing to advection in cold air
Autor:
Steven L. Edburg, Brian Lamb, Charles E. Kolb, Thomas W. Ferrara, James R. Whetstone, Matthew Harrison, Touché Howard, Wesley Dyck, Antonio Possolo, Amy Townsend-Small
Publikováno v:
Environmental sciencetechnology. 49(8)
Fugitive losses from natural gas distribution systems are a significant source of anthropogenic methane. Here, we report on a national sampling program to measure methane emissions from 13 urban distribution systems across the U.S. Emission factors w
Publikováno v:
Journal of Geophysical Research. 116
[1] Insect outbreaks are major ecosystem disturbances, affecting a similar area as forest fires annually across North America. Tree mortality caused by bark beetle outbreaks alters carbon cycling in the first several years following the disturbance b
Autor:
Jeffrey A. Hicke, Steven L. Edburg, A. David McGuire, Wenping Yuan, Shuguang Liu, Christopher Potter, Yiqi Luo, Yueming Hu, Jianwu Tang, Benjamin Bond-Lamberty, Jinxun Liu, Jingfeng Xiao, Jennifer Oeding, Shuqing Zhao, Rodrigo Vargas, Jing M. Chen, Robert E. Keane
Publikováno v:
Journal of Geophysical Research. 116
[1] Forest disturbances greatly alter the carbon cycle at various spatial and temporal scales. It is critical to understand disturbance regimes and their impacts to better quantify regional and global carbon dynamics. This review of the status and ma
Autor:
Brian Lamb, Frank N. Keutsch, Mary Anne Carroll, M. Alaghmand, H. W. Wallace, Paul B. Shepson, Bertram T. Jobson, T. K. Starn, S. B. Bertman, Eric C. Apel, Steven L. Edburg, Philip S. Stevens, Daniel D. Riemer, Xianliang Zhou
During the 1998, 2000, 2001, 2008, and 2009 summer intensives of the Program for Research on Oxidants: PHotochemistry, Emissions and Transport (PROPHET), ambient measurement of nitrogen oxides (NO + NO2 = NOx) were conducted. NO and NOx mole fraction
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::fe55cc73b3dc4dc2696b749994884de8
https://doi.org/10.5194/acpd-11-29251-2011
https://doi.org/10.5194/acpd-11-29251-2011
Autor:
E. Allwine, Brian Lamb, Scott M. Spuler, Sean P. Burns, Andrew Turnipseed, Shane D. Mayor, Jan Kleissl, Steven L. Edburg, Peter P. Sullivan, Thomas W. Horst, Luciana V. Rizzo, Edward G. Patton, William J. Massman, Jeffrey Weil, Stephen P. Oncley, Roni Avissar, Donald H. Lenschow, Jielun Sun, William O. J. Brown, Andreas Held, Alex Guenther, Ronald Calhoun, Kyaw Tha Paw U, Thomas Karl
Publikováno v:
Patton, EG; Horst, TW; Sullivan, PP; Lenschow, DH; Oncley, SP; Brown, WOJ; et al.(2011). The canopy horizontal array turbulence study. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 92(5), 593-611. doi: 10.1175/2010BAMS2614.1. UC Irvine: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/70g5k7xx
The Canopy Horizontal Array Turbulence Study (CHATS) took place in spring 2007 and is the third in the series of Horizontal Array Turbulence Study (HATS) experiments. The HATS experiments have been instrumental in testing and developing subfilterscal
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::c6811a1419c9f27197a7a969c2bc5885
http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/70g5k7xx
http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/70g5k7xx