Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6329898 | Science of The Total Environment | 2014 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Atmospheric particulate have deleterious impacts on human health. Predicting dust and aerosol emission and transport would be helpful to reduce harmful impacts but, despite numerous studies, prediction of dust events and contaminant transport in dust remains challenging. In this work, we show that relative humidity and wind speed are both determinants in atmospheric dust concentration. Observations of atmospheric dust concentrations in Green Valley, AZ, USA, and Juárez, Chihuahua, México, show that PM10 concentrations are not directly correlated with wind speed or relative humidity separately. However, selecting the data for high wind speeds (>Â 4Â m/s at 10Â m elevation), a definite trend is observed between dust concentration and relative humidity: dust concentration increases with relative humidity, reaching a maximum around 25% and it subsequently decreases with relative humidity. Models for dust storm forecasting may be improved by utilizing atmospheric humidity and wind speed as main drivers for dust generation and transport.
Related Topics
Life Sciences
Environmental Science
Environmental Chemistry
Authors
Janae Csavina, Jason Field, Omar Félix, Alba Y. Corral-Avitia, A. Eduardo Sáez, Eric A. Betterton,