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Atmospheric chemistry / Ann M. Holloway and Richard Wayne.

By: Holloway, Ann M.
Contributor(s): Wayne, Richard P. (Richard Peer).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Cambridge : RSC Publishing, 2010Description: xiii, 271 p. : ill. (some col.), maps ; 26 cm.ISBN: 9781847558077 (hbk.).Subject(s): AIR POLLUTION | ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS | ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY | RADIATION CHEMISTRY | PHOTOCHEMISTRY | STRATOSPHERE | TROPOSPHERE | AEROSOLS | AIR POLLUTANTS | CLIMATIC CHANGES | OZONE | HUMAN FACTORS | ATMOSPHERIC DIFFUSION | FEEDBACKHoldings: GRETA POINT: 551.510.4 ATM Summary: Provides readers with a basic knowledge of the chemistry of Earth's atmosphere, and an understanding of the role that chemical transformations play in this vital part of our environment. The composition of the 'natural' atmosphere (troposphere, stratosphere and mesosphere) is described in terms of the physical and chemical cycles that govern the behaviour of the major and the many minor species present, and of the atmospheric lifetimes of those species. An extension of these ideas leads to a discussion of the impacts of Man's activities on the atmosphere, and to an understanding of some of the most important environmental issues of our time. One thread of the book explains how living organisms alter the composition and pressures in the atmosphere, modify temperatures, and change the intensity and wavelength-distribution of light arriving from the Sun. Meanwhile, the living organisms on Earth have depended on these very same environmental conditions being satisfactory for the maintenance and evolution of life. There thus appear to be two-way interactions between life and the atmosphere. Man, just one species of living organism, has developed an unfortunate ability to interfere with the feedbacks that seem to have maintained the atmosphere to be supportive of surface life for more than 3.5 billion years. This book will help chemists to understand the background to the problems that arise from such interference.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
BOOK BOOK WELLINGTON BOOKS 551.510.4 ATM 1 Issued 28/05/2024 B00018

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Provides readers with a basic knowledge of the chemistry of Earth's atmosphere, and an understanding of the role that chemical transformations play in this vital part of our environment. The composition of the 'natural' atmosphere (troposphere, stratosphere and mesosphere) is described in terms of the physical and chemical cycles that govern the behaviour of the major and the many minor species present, and of the atmospheric lifetimes of those species. An extension of these ideas leads to a discussion of the impacts of Man's activities on the atmosphere, and to an understanding of some of the most important environmental issues of our time. One thread of the book explains how living organisms alter the composition and pressures in the atmosphere, modify temperatures, and change the intensity and wavelength-distribution of light arriving from the Sun. Meanwhile, the living organisms on Earth have depended on these very same environmental conditions being satisfactory for the maintenance and evolution of life. There thus appear to be two-way interactions between life and the atmosphere. Man, just one species of living organism, has developed an unfortunate ability to interfere with the feedbacks that seem to have maintained the atmosphere to be supportive of surface life for more than 3.5 billion years. This book will help chemists to understand the background to the problems that arise from such interference.

GRETA POINT: 551.510.4 ATM

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