Books on the topic 'Enhanced emission'

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1

Dharmawan, I. Wayan Susi. Enhanced approaches to estimate net emission reductions from deforestation and degradation of undrained peat swamp forests in Central Kalimantan, Indonesia. Bogor, West Java, Indonesia: Center for Climate Change and Policy Research and Development, Forestry Research and Development Agency, Ministry of Forestry, Indonesia in cooperation with International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO), 2013.

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2

Leung, Emi. Mechanistic Investigation of Novel Niobium-Based Materials as Enhanced Oxygen Storage Components and Innovative CO Oxidation Catalyst Support for Environmental Emission Control Systems. [New York, N.Y.?]: [publisher not identified], 2016.

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3

California. Bureau of State Audits. The Carl Moyer Memorial Air Quality Standards Attainment Program: Improved practices in applicant selection, contracting, and marketing could lead to more cost-effective emission reductions and enhanced operations. Sacramento, CA: California State Auditor, Bureau of State Audits, 2007.

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California. Bureau of State Audits. The Carl Moyer Memorial Air Quality Standards Attainment Program: Improved practices in applicant selection, contracting, and marketing could lead to more cost-effective emission reductions and enhanced operations. Sacramento, CA: California State Auditor, Bureau of State Audits, 2007.

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5

California. Bureau of State Audits. The Carl Moyer Memorial Air Quality Standards Attainment Program: Improved practices in applicant selection, contracting, and marketing could lead to more cost-effective emission reductions and enhanced operations. Sacramento, CA: California State Auditor, Bureau of State Audits, 2007.

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6

Ohio EPA. Division of Air Pollution Control, ed. Enhanced emissions testing: Information for automobile dealers. Columbus: [Ohio EPA, Division of Air Pollution Control], 1996.

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7

Protection, Massachusetts Dept of Environmental. MA31 conversion factor analysis and interim test effectiveness evaluation: Massachusetts Enhanced Emissions and Safety Test. [Boston, Mass.]: Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Executive Office of Environmental Affairs, Dept. of Environmental Protection, 2003.

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8

Agency, Illinois Environmental Protection. A tuned car has that air of quality: Vehicle emissions testing in Illinois : enhanced inspection and maintenance. Springfield, Ill: Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, 1994.

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9

Handler, Alan B. Report to Governor Christine Todd Whitman on implementation of the enhanced motor vehicle emissions inspection and maintenance program. [Trenton, N.J: The Panel?, 2000.

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10

Agency, Illinois Environmental Protection. A new era of clean air is dawning--: The Illinois Vehicle Emissions Test Program : enhanced inspection and maintenance. Springfield, Ill: Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, 1997.

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11

Howard, Yonas, and International Conference on Xe/CT CBF (1st : 1990 : Orlando, Fla.), eds. Cerebral blood flow measurement with stable xenon-enhanced computed tomography. New York: Raven Press, 1992.

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12

Virginia. Dept. of Environmental Quality. Development of an enhanced motor vehicle emissions inspection and maintenance program for Northern Virginia: Report of the Dept. of Environmental Quality to the Governor and the General Assembly of Virginia. Richmond: Commonwealth of Virginia, 1994.

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13

Pullen, Reid, Glen Derbyshire, and Mitch Goodgion. Sweeps Playbook: Shockwave Enhanced Emission Photo Acoustic Streaming. Root Canal Academy, 2022.

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14

Sabharwal, Nikant, Parthiban Arumugam, and Andrew Kelion. Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198759942.003.0004.

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Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) allows an organ to be imaged in three dimensions with enhanced contrast. Of particular relevance in nuclear cardiology, it also allows the heart to be reorientated relative to its own axes, and slices presented in standard orthogonal planes. Scintigraphic imaging is thereby rendered more accessible to cardiologists already familiar with echocardiography and other imaging modalities. This chapter explores specific issues of instrumentation, acquisition, and processing, discussing camera options and specific quality control issues. SPECT reconstruction is covered with reference to both filtered back-projection and iterative reconstruction. Other key aspects of SPECT covered include image reorientation, colour display, gated SPECT, and attenuation correction.
15

Paulson, CAJ. Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies. Edited by RA Durie, DJ Williams, AY Smith, and P. McMullan. CSIRO Publishing, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/9780643105027.

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The control of greenhouse gas emissions continues to be a major global problem. It is inter-disciplinary, both in substance and approach, and covers technical, political and economic issues involving governments, industry and the scientific community. These proceedings contain 220 papers presented at the 5th International Conference on Greenhouse Gas Control Technologies (GHGT-5) held in August 2000 at Cairns, Queensland, Australia. The papers cover the capture of carbon dioxide, geological storage of carbon dioxide, ocean storage of carbon dioxide, storage of carbon dioxide with enhanced hydrocarbon recovery, utilisation of carbon dioxide, other greenhouse gases, fuel cells, alternative energy carriers, energy efficiency, life cycle assessments and energy modelling, economics, international and national policy, trading and accounting policy, social and community issues, and reducing emission from industry and power generation.
16

Aspire. Enhanced Emissions Testing - Leader Led Kit: ASP-EE-KT-120-00. Delmar Pub, 1997.

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17

Aspire. Enhanced Emissions Repair Through 5-gas Analysis: ASP-SS-SK-122-00. CENGAGE Delmar Learning, 1999.

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18

Yang, Yvonne. TB3121 - Conducted and Radiated Emissions on 8-Bit Enhanced Mid-Range Microcontroller. Microchip Technology Incorporated, 2015.

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19

Brooker, Geoffrey. Essays in Physics. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198857242.001.0001.

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“Essays in Physics” gives accounts of 32 chosen topics. The level is that of a 3–4-year university course in Physics. The topics discussed are diverse but “mainstream”. Each essay aims to say something fresh that complements what the reader will find elsewhere. Just what “fresh” means inevitably depends somewhat on the subject matter. Some chapters give a “different” slant on a familiar idea (e.g. electromagnetic energy, Lorentz transformation, photon emission). Some contain an analysis not available elsewhere (diffraction, feedback stability). Some correct material that is commonplace in many textbooks (much atomic physics). Some add insightful discussion to standard material (free energy, Brillouin zones). One in particular refines technique (perturbation theory). One brings order to confusion (-m dB). The aim in all cases is to encourage a fuller, and correct, understanding, and an enhanced intellectual acuity (critical faculty). With a subject as mature as physics, it is bold to claim originality. However I will dare to make that claim, in particular for Chapters 10, 22 and 30, but also for parts of most other chapters.
20

Kadim, Akeel M. Electroluminescence Light Emitting Device Enhanced by TPD Polymer and Emissive Quantum Dots. Trans Tech Publications, Limited, 2017.

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21

Kadim, Akeel M. Electroluminescence Light Emitting Device Enhanced by TPD Polymer and Emissive Quantum Dots. Trans Tech Publications, Limited, 2017.

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22

Pierce, Linda. TB3121 - Conducted and Radiated Emissions on 8-Bit Enhanced Mid-Range MCUs Tech. Brief. Microchip Technology Incorporated, 2014.

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23

Bank, Asian Development. Climate Change Operational Framework 2017-2030: Enhanced Actions for Low Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Climate-Resilient Development. Asian Development Bank Institute, 2017.

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24

Yang, Kun. Observed Regional Climate Change in Tibet over the Last Decades. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228620.013.587.

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The Tibetan Plateau (TP) is subjected to strong interactions among the atmosphere, hydrosphere, cryosphere, and biosphere. The Plateau exerts huge thermal forcing on the mid-troposphere over the mid-latitude of the Northern Hemisphere during spring and summer. This region also contains the headwaters of major rivers in Asia and provides a large portion of the water resources used for economic activities in adjacent regions. Since the beginning of the 1980s, the TP has undergone evident climate changes, with overall surface air warming and moistening, solar dimming, and decrease in wind speed. Surface warming, which depends on elevation and its horizontal pattern (warming in most of the TP but cooling in the westernmost TP), was consistent with glacial changes. Accompanying the warming was air moistening, with a sudden increase in precipitable water in 1998. Both triggered more deep clouds, which resulted in solar dimming. Surface wind speed declined from the 1970s and started to recover in 2002, as a result of atmospheric circulation adjustment caused by the differential surface warming between Asian high latitudes and low latitudes.The climate changes over the TP have changed energy and water cycles and has thus reshaped the local environment. Thermal forcing over the TP has weakened. The warming and decrease in wind speed lowered the Bowen ratio and has led to less surface sensible heating. Atmospheric radiative cooling has been enhanced, mainly through outgoing longwave emission from the warming planetary system and slightly enhanced solar radiation reflection. The trend in both energy terms has contributed to the weakening of thermal forcing over the Plateau. The water cycle has been significantly altered by the climate changes. The monsoon-impacted region (i.e., the southern and eastern regions of the TP) has received less precipitation, more evaporation, less soil moisture and less runoff, which has resulted in the general shrinkage of lakes and pools in this region, although glacier melt has increased. The region dominated by westerlies (i.e., central, northern and western regions of the TP) received more precipitation, more evaporation, more soil moisture and more runoff, which together with more glacier melt resulted in the general expansion of lakes in this region. The overall wetting in the TP is due to both the warmer and moister conditions at the surface, which increased convective available potential energy and may eventually depend on decadal variability of atmospheric circulations such as Atlantic Multi-decadal Oscillation and an intensified Siberian High. The drying process in the southern region is perhaps related to the expansion of Hadley circulation. All these processes have not been well understood.
25

Bueso Guillén, Pedro José. White paper: How to procure e-mobility solutions. Corvers Chair on Innovation Procurement. University of Zaragoza, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.26754/uz.978-84-18321-10-8.

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This White Paper provides a step-by-step approach on how to procure e-mobility solutions. Chapter 1 covers the implementation of a so-called innovation procurement. Chapter 2 covers all relevant aspects that are related to the Government Procurement Agreement (GPA) of the World Trade Organization with a link to the most relevant aspects of EU Trade Agreements that enhance the competitiveness of European companies. The chapter also presents an overview of the most recent and relevant EU initiatives to maintain a level playing field in public procurement within and across the boundaries of the EU Internal Market. Chapter 3 covers the possibilities to include social and environmental criteria within government procurements. Chapter 4 concludes on the findings of the e-Mobility paper and provides the reader with useful practices and tools to follow up on the procurement of e-mobility solutions. For the context of this White Paper, e-mobility solutions are transport solutions which are based on heavy duty vehicles with a zero-emission tailpipe pollution, which are a category under article 4 (5) of the Directive 2009/33/EC of 23 April 2009 on the promotion of clean road transport vehicles in support of low-emission mobility amended by Directive (EU) 2019/1161 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 June 2019
26

Zeitlin, Vladimir. Rotating Shallow-Water Models with Moist Convection. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198804338.003.0015.

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It is shown how the standard RSW can be ’augmented’ to include phase transitions of water. This chapter explains how to incorporate extra (convective) vertical fluxes in the model. By using Lagrangian conservation of equivalent potential temperature condensation of the water vapour, which is otherwise a passive tracer, is included in the model and linked to convective fluxes. Simple relaxational parameterisation of condensation permits the closure of the system, and surface evaporation can be easily included. Physical and mathematical properties of thus obtained model are explained, and illustrated on the example of wave scattering on the moisture front. The model is applied to ’moist’ baroclinic instability of jets and vortices. Condensation is shown to produce a transient increase of the growth rate. Special attention is paid to the moist instabilities of hurricane-like vortices, which are shown to enhance intensification of the hurricane, increase gravity wave emission, and generate convection-coupled waves.
27

Kemmerer, Lisa. Eating Earth. Oxford University Press, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199391844.001.0001.

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Exploring the environmental effects of animal agriculture, fishing, and hunting, Eating Earth exposes critical common ground between earth and animal advocacy. The first chapter (animal agriculture) examines greenhouse gas emissions and climate change, manure and dead zones, freshwater depletion, deforestation, predator control, land and use--including the ranching industries public lands subsidies. Chapter two first examines whether or not the consumption of fish is healthy and outlines morally relevant aspects of fish physiology, then scrutinizes the fishing industry, documenting the "silent collapse" of ocean ecosystems and calling attention to the indiscriminate nature of hooks and nets, including the problem of bycatch and what this means for endangered species and fragile seascapes. Chapter three outlines the historic link between the U. S. Government, wildlife management, and hunters, then systematically unravels common beliefs about sport hunting, such as the belief that hunters are essential to wildlife conservation, that contemporary hunting qualifies as a tradition, and that hunting is merciful, economical, or rooted in "fair chase." At the end of each chapter, Kemmerer examines possible solutions to problems presented, such as sustainable meats, organic and local, grass fed, aquaculture, new fishing technologies, and enhanced regulations. Eating Earth offers a concise examination of the environmental effects of dietary choice, clearly presenting the many reasons why dietary choice ought to be front and center for environmentalists. Kemmerer's writing, supported by nearly 80 graphs and summary slides, is clear, straightforward, and punctuated with wry humor.
28

Schmidt-Thomé, Philipp. Climate Change Adaptation. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228620.013.635.

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Climate change adaptation is the ability of a society or a natural system to adjust to the (changing) conditions that support life in a certain climate region, including weather extremes in that region. The current discussion on climate change adaptation began in the 1990s, with the publication of the Assessment Reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Since the beginning of the 21st century, most countries, and many regions and municipalities have started to develop and implement climate change adaptation strategies and plans. But since the implementation of adaptation measures must be planned and conducted at the local level, a major challenge is to actually implement adaptation to climate change in practice. One challenge is that scientific results are mainly published on international or national levels, and political guidelines are written at transnational (e.g., European Union), national, or regional levels—these scientific results must be downscaled, interpreted, and adapted to local municipal or community levels. Needless to say, the challenges for implementation are also rooted in a large number of uncertainties, from long time spans to matters of scale, as well as in economic, political, and social interests. From a human perspective, climate change impacts occur rather slowly, while local decision makers are engaged with daily business over much shorter time spans.Among the obstacles to implementing adaptation measures to climate change are three major groups of uncertainties: (a) the uncertainties surrounding the development of our future climate, which include the exact climate sensitivity of anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, the reliability of emission scenarios and underlying storylines, and inherent uncertainties in climate models; (b) uncertainties about anthropogenically induced climate change impacts (e.g., long-term sea level changes, changing weather patterns, and extreme events); and (c) uncertainties about the future development of socioeconomic and political structures as well as legislative frameworks.Besides slow changes, such as changing sea levels and vegetation zones, extreme events (natural hazards) are a factor of major importance. Many societies and their socioeconomic systems are not properly adapted to their current climate zones (e.g., intensive agriculture in dry zones) or to extreme events (e.g., housing built in flood-prone areas). Adaptation measures can be successful only by gaining common societal agreement on their necessity and overall benefit. Ideally, climate change adaptation measures are combined with disaster risk reduction measures to enhance resilience on short, medium, and long time scales.The role of uncertainties and time horizons is addressed by developing climate change adaptation measures on community level and in close cooperation with local actors and stakeholders, focusing on strengthening resilience by addressing current and emerging vulnerability patterns. Successful adaptation measures are usually achieved by developing “no-regret” measures, in other words—measures that have at least one function of immediate social and/or economic benefit as well as long-term, future benefits. To identify socially acceptable and financially viable adaptation measures successfully, it is useful to employ participatory tools that give all involved parties and decision makers the possibility to engage in the process of identifying adaptation measures that best fit collective needs.

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