AOSC 634 Air Sampling and Analysis
AOSC 458R Advanced Topics in Atmospheric and Oceanic Science:
Observations in Atmospheric Science
https://www.atmos.umd.edu/~russ/syllabus634.html
Spring 2020
Lectures, MF 1:00pm in ATL 2330, can be arranged to accommodate student schedules.
Laboratory, W 1:00 to 4:00pm (or by arrangement) ATL 4332
Mondays will be guidance on methods and applications
Fridays will be Lecture on the theory of observations.
Lecture Schedule Topic Week I. PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS OF SENSORS A. Introduction 1 B. Objectives 1 C. Precision, Accuracy, Uncertainty 1 D. Static Response 1 E. Dynamic Response 2 F. First & Second Order Systems 2 G. Sinusoidal vs. step input 3 II. NOISE AND ITS REDUCTION A. Johnson and shot noise 3 B. Optical Absorption Systems 4 C. Chemiluminescent Systems 5 III. SAMPLING STRATEGY A. Exposure and Site Effects 6 B. Geographic Variability 7 IV. INSTRUMENTATION A. Ozone by UV Absorption 8 B. CO2 CH4 & CO by Cavity Ringdown 9 C. NOx Detection 10 D. Chemical Flux Measurement 11 E. Aerosol Physics 12 F. Aerosol Chemistry 13Lecture Presentation Files
Experiment Schedule
Topic Week
I. Fundamental Atmospheric Properties A. Precipitation 1-6 Precipitation lab guide B. Temperature 1 Temperature lab guide C. Pressure 2 Pressure lab guide D. Flow Meters 3 Flow Control lab guide E. Humidity 4 Humidity lab guide F. Surface-based remote sensing 5 II. Trace Gases A. Ozone 8 O3 lab guide B. Sulfur Dioxide 9 SO2 lab guide C. Oxides of Nitrogen 10 NOX lab guide D. Greenhouse gases CO2, CH4, CO, H2O 11 GHG lab guide Picarro manual III. Aerosol Optical Properties A. Scattering 12 B. Absorption 13 IV. Special Topics Final Exam in finals week. Text: Specially prepared laboratory guides, instrument manuals, and current scientific literature. Extensive use will be made of Instructor's Handbook on Meteorological Instrumentation, F. Brock, Ed.,(NCAR Tech. Note NCAR/TN-327+1A) 1984. Handbook of Meteorology Finlayson-Pitts and Pitts, Atmospheric Chemistry, 2002. Excellent WMO site http://www.wmo.int/pages/prog/www/IMOP/CIMO-Guide.html Grading: Best seven (for undergraduates best six) of nine laboratory reports (70%) lab notebook (10%) and a final exam (20%). The AOSC634 final will include additional, more challenging questions. Lab reports will be graded on a 10-point basis (>9 = A; >8 = B; >7 = C) the average of your best reports will be counted.