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Photogrammetric and photometric investigation of a smoke plume viewed from space.Use of detailed analyses of an Apollo 6 stereographic photograph of a smoke plume which originated in southern Arizona and crossed over into Mexico to illustrate how high-resolution photography can aid meteorologists in evaluating specific air pollution events. Photogrammetric analysis of the visible smoke plume revealed that the plume was 8.06 miles long and attained a maximum width of 4000 ft, 3.0 miles from the 570-ft chimney emitting the effluent. Stereometric analysis showed that the visible top of the plume rose nearly 2400 ft above stack top, attaining 90% of this total rise 1.75 miles downwind from the source. Photometric analysis of the plume revealed a field of plume optical density that portrayed leptokurtic and bimodal distributions rather than a true Gaussian distribution. A horizontal eddy diffusivity of about 650,000 sq cm/sec and a vertical eddy diffusivity of 230,000 sq cm/sec were determined from the plume dimensions. Neutron activation analysis of plume samples revealed the elemental composition of the smoke to be copper, arsenic, selenium, indium and antimony, with trace amounts of vanadium and scandium.
Document ID
19720034773
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Randerson, D.
(U.S. Department of Commerce, Air Resources Laboratory, Las Vegas Nev., United States)
Garcia, J. G.
Whitehead, V. S.
(NASA Manned Spacecraft Center Houston, Tex., United States)
Date Acquired
August 6, 2013
Publication Date
December 1, 1971
Publication Information
Publication: Journal of Applied Meteorology
Volume: 10
Subject Category
Instrumentation And Photography
Accession Number
72A18439
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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