Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4445286 Atmospheric Environment 2005 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Detrended fluctuation analysis is applied to the Athens air-pollution time-series consisting of hourly observations of ozone, nitrogen oxides, and particulate matter obtained at five air-pollution monitoring stations during 1987–2003.Persistent power-law correlations in the fluctuations of daytime and nighttime ozone concentrations with lag times ranging from 1 week to 5 years were detected with more intense correlations (“stronger memory”) during daytime. The fluctuations of nitrogen oxide concentrations exhibit similar behavior. Finally, persistent power-law correlations from about 4 h to 9 months were found in PM10 fluctuations in Athens. Long-range correlations for lag times from about 4 h to 2 weeks were also detected for PM2.5 fluctuations in a 6-month data set collected at the University of Maryland “Supersite” in East Baltimore.Although the origin of the long-range behaviour of air-pollution merits further investigation, these findings presumably, reflect short and longer term source/meteorological features that are probably related to the self-organized critical behavior of the atmosphere. These findings provide power-law relationships which may substantially contribute to the development of more reliable simulating models for the ozone, nitrogen oxides, and particulate matter fluctuations.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Atmospheric Science
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