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Air Pollution Modeling and its Application XXVI PDF

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Springer Proceedings in Complexity Clemens Mensink Wanmin Gong Amir Hakami Editors Air Pollution Modeling and its Application XXVI Springer Proceedings in Complexity SpringerProceedingsinComplexitypublishesproceedingsfromscholarlymeetings on all topics relating to the interdisciplinary studies of complex systems science. Springerwelcomes book ideas from authors. The series isindexed inScopus. Proposals must include the following: – name, place and date of the scientific meeting – a link to the committees (local organization, international advisors etc.) – scientific description of the meeting – list of invited/plenary speakers – an estimate of the planned proceedings book parameters (number of pages/ articles, requested number of bulk copies, submission deadline) Submit your proposals to: [email protected] More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/11637 Clemens Mensink Wanmin Gong (cid:129) (cid:129) Amir Hakami Editors Air Pollution Modeling and its Application XXVI 123 Editors Clemens Mensink Wanmin Gong VITO NV EnvironmentandClimate Change Canada Mol,Belgium Science andTechnologyBranch Toronto, ON,Canada Amir Hakami Department ofCivil andEnvironmental Engineering Carleton University Ottawa, ON,Canada ISSN 2213-8684 ISSN 2213-8692 (electronic) SpringerProceedings in Complexity ISBN978-3-030-22054-9 ISBN978-3-030-22055-6 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-22055-6 ©SpringerNatureSwitzerlandAG2020 Thisworkissubjecttocopyright.AllrightsarereservedbythePublisher,whetherthewholeorpart of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission orinformationstorageandretrieval,electronicadaptation,computersoftware,orbysimilarordissimilar methodologynowknownorhereafterdeveloped. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publicationdoesnotimply,evenintheabsenceofaspecificstatement,thatsuchnamesareexemptfrom therelevantprotectivelawsandregulationsandthereforefreeforgeneraluse. The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the editors give a warranty, expressed or implied, with respect to the material contained hereinorforanyerrorsoromissionsthatmayhavebeenmade.Thepublisherremainsneutralwithregard tojurisdictionalclaimsinpublishedmapsandinstitutionalaffiliations. ThisSpringerimprintispublishedbytheregisteredcompanySpringerNatureSwitzerlandAG Theregisteredcompanyaddressis:Gewerbestrasse11,6330Cham,Switzerland History of the International Technical Meeting (ITM) on Air Pollution Modeling and Its Application Pilot Studies 1969–1974 AirPollutionPilotStudy(PilotCountry:USA) 1975–1979 AirPollutionAssessmentMethodologyandModeling(PilotCountry: Germany) 1980–1984 AirPollutionControlStrategiesandImpactModeling(PilotCountry:Germany) Pilot Follow-Up Meetings Pilot Country—USA (R. A. McCormick, L. E. Niemeyer) February1971 Eindhoven,TheNetherlands FirstConferenceonLowPollutionPower SystemsDevelopment July1971 Paris,France SecondMeetingoftheExpertPanelonAir PollutionModeling NATO/CCMS International Technical Meetings (ITM) on Air Pollution Modeling and Its Application Subsequent meetings were supported by the NATO Committee for Challenges to Modern Society and were designated NATO/CCMS International Technical Meetings (ITM) on Air Pollution Modeling and its Application. October 1972 Paris,France 3rd ITM May 1973 Oberursel,FederalRepublicofGermany 4th ITM June 1974 Roskilde,Denmark 5th ITM v vi HistoryoftheInternationalTechnicalMeeting(ITM)… Pilot Country—Germany (Erich Weber) September 1975 Frankfurt,FederalRepublicofGermany 6th ITM September 1976 AirlieHouse,USA 7th ITM September 1977 Louvain-la-Neuve,Belgium 8th ITM August 1978 Toronto,Canada 9th ITM October 1979 Rome,Italy 10th ITM Pilot Country—Belgium (Chris De Wispelaere) November 1980 Amsterdam,TheNetherlands 11th ITM September 1981 MenloPark,California,USA 12th ITM September 1982 IledesEmbiez,France 13th ITM September 1983 Copenhagen,Denmark 14th ITM April 1985 St.Louis,Missouri,USA 15th ITM Pilot Country—The Netherlands (Han van Dop) April 1987 Lindau,FederalRepublicofGermany 16th ITM September 1988 Cambridge,UK 17th ITM May 1990 Vancouver,BC,Canada 18th ITM September 1991 Ierapetra,Greece 19th ITM Pilot Country—Denmark (Sven-Erik Gryning) November 1993 Valencia,Spain 20th ITM November 1995 Baltimore,Maryland,USA 21st ITM May 1997 Clermont-Ferrand,France 22nd ITM September 1998 Varna,Bulgaria 23rd ITM May 2000 Boulder,Colorado,USA 24th ITM Pilot Country—Portugal (Carlos Borrego) September 2001 Louvain-la-Neuve,Belgium 25th ITM May 2003 Istanbul,Turkey 26th ITM October 2004 Banff,Canada 27th ITM May 2006 Leipzig,Germany 28th ITM HistoryoftheInternationalTechnicalMeeting(ITM)… vii NATO/SPS International Technical Meetings (ITM) on Air Pollution Modeling and Its Application In2007,NATO’sCommitteeforChallengestoModernSocietywasdisbandedand replaced by NATO’s Committee on Science for Peace and Security (NATO/SPS), which continued its support for the ITM. September 2007 Aveiro,Portugal 29th ITM Pilot Country—Canada (Douw Steyn) May 2009 SanFrancisco,California,USA 30th ITM September 2010 Torino,Italy 31st ITM May 2012 Utrecht,TheNetherlands 32nd ITM International Technical Meetings (ITM) on Air Pollution Modeling and Its Application In 2012, the NATO Committee on Science for Peace and Security refocused its mandate, and the ITM became independent of NATO/SPS support. September 2013 Miami,USA 33rd ITM May 2015 Montpellier,France 34th ITM Pilot Country—Belgium (Clemens Mensink) October 2016 Chania(Crete),Greece 35th ITM May 2018 Ottawa,Canada 36th ITM List of Participants Sebnem Aksoyoglu, Paul Scherrer Institute Stefano Alessandrin, National Center for Atmospheric Research Stavros Antonopoulos, Environment and Climate Change Canada Calvin Arter, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Saravanan Arunachalam, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Marina Astitha, University of Connecticut Alexander Baklanov, World Meteorological Organization Sabine Banzhaf, Freie Universität Berlin Jerzy Bartnicki, Norwegian Meteorological Institute Carlos Borrego, University of Aveiro Véronique Bouchet, Environment Canada Richard Burnett, Health Canada María Allué Camacho, Agencia Estatal de Meteorología (AEMET) Hana Chaloupecká, Institute of Thermomechanics of the CAS Robyn Chatwin-Davies, Carleton University Nadine Chaumerliac, LaMP/CNRS Yilin Chen, Georgia Institute of Technology Jack Chen, Environment and Climate Change Canada Pieter De Meutter, Belgian Nuclear Research Centre Laurent Deguillaume, LaMP/OPGC/CNRS Andy Delcloo, Royal Meteorological Institute of Belgium Denis Dionne, EGS Ecosupport Congtru Doan, MOECC Anthony Dore, Centre for Ecology and Hydrology Annie Duhamel, Environment Canada Zita Ferenczi, Hungarian Meteorological Service Melanie Fillingham, Carleton University/Golder Associates Arlene Fiore, LDEO/Columbia Dennis Fudge, Saskatchewan Ministry of Environment Stefano Galmarini, European Commission—EU Science Hub Valerie Garcia, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency ix x ListofParticipants Fernando Garcia Menendez, North Carolina State University Martin Gauthier, RWDI Camilla Geels, Aarhus University Angele Genereux, Carleton University Wanmin Gong, Environment and Climate Change Canada Cristina Guerreiro, NILU—Norwegian Institute for Air Research Nitsa Haikin, TAU/NRCN Amir Hakami, Carleton University Tomas Halenka, Charles University Yvonne Hall, Ontario Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Steven Hanna, Hanna Consultants Risto Hänninen, Finnish Meteorological Institute Lucas Henneman, Harvard Chan School of Public Health Christian Hogrefe, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Li Huang, Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy Li Huang, Ontario Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Ulas Im, Aarhus University Cesunica Ivey, University of California, Riverside Peter Jackson, University of Northern British Columbia Jukka-Pekka Jalkanen, Finnish Meteorological Institute Jianhui Jiang, Paul Scherrer Institute Oriol Jorba Casellas, Barcelona Supercomputing Center George Kallos, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Maria Kanakidou, University of Crete Daiwen Kang, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Eleni Karnezi, Carnegie Mellon University Ari Karppinen, Finnish Meteorological Institute Niko Karvosenoja, Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE) Anke Kelker, Environment Canada Janya Kelly, Golder Associates Ltd. Pavel Kishcha (Kichtcha), Tel Aviv University Rostislav Kouznetsov, Finnish Meteorological Institute Maciej Kryza, Wroclaw University Kaarle Kupiainen, Finnish Environment Institute (SYKE) Nana-Owusua Kwamena, Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission Pius Lee, Department of Commerce—NOAA/ARL Wouter Lefebvre, VITO Joana Leitao, IASS—Potsdam Fabian Lenartz, ISSeP Jinliang Liu, Ontario Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Deborah Luecken, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Huiying Luo, University of Connecticut Bino Maiheu, VITO Paul Makar, Environment and Climate Change Canada Randall Martin, Dalhousie University

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