Difference between revisions of "AtmChem-5151"
From Jimenez Group Wiki
m (→Textbooks) |
m (→Homeworks) |
||
Line 29: | Line 29: | ||
=== Homeworks === | === Homeworks === | ||
− | * Homeworks and instructions will be posted at [http://tinyurl.com/hw-5151 http://tinyurl.com/hw-5151] | + | * Homeworks and instructions will be posted at [http://tinyurl.com/hw-5151 http://tinyurl.com/hw-5151] [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ihQX7rdZ6Gbj-n0_g-53WUIh-ty2sa7SKZz8n8ce2Hs/edit Editable] |
** Solutions: [http://cires.colorado.edu/jimenez-group/AtmChem/2013/Homework_1_Solutions.pxp HW1], [http://cires.colorado.edu/jimenez-group/AtmChem/2013/Homework_2_Solutions.pxp HW2] | ** Solutions: [http://cires.colorado.edu/jimenez-group/AtmChem/2013/Homework_1_Solutions.pxp HW1], [http://cires.colorado.edu/jimenez-group/AtmChem/2013/Homework_2_Solutions.pxp HW2] | ||
Revision as of 21:35, 7 February 2013
This is the new web home page for the graduate course CHEM-5151 / ATOC-5151: Atmospheric Chemistry, when taught by Prof. Jose-Luis Jimenez. Prof. Jimenez will offer this course in Spring 2013.
- A shortcut to this page is http://tinyurl.com/AtmChem
Contents
General Information
- Syllabus for Spring 2013
- Course Schedule: http://tinyurl.com/Sched-5151
- Pre-course questionnaire for Spring 2013
- Office Hours:
- Jose (Ekeley M329, 303-492-3557): Mondays 4:00-5:30 pm and Wednesdays 9:30-11 am
- Please let Jose know in advance (at least 1.5 hrs before the start of the office hrs period) if you are coming. He may be elsewhere if not knowing that you are coming.
- Future Exceptions: Wed 20-Feb will be 11-12 instead of 9:30-11.
- Jordan (Ekeley M132): Mondays 9:30-11 am and Wednesdays 12:15-1:45 pm (no advance notice needed for Jordan)
- Doodle Poll for selecting office hours
- Jose (Ekeley M329, 303-492-3557): Mondays 4:00-5:30 pm and Wednesdays 9:30-11 am
Igor Software
- We will use the Igor software package as the common language for calculations and programs in the course. We strongly recommend donwloading a demo version of Igor and going through the Getting Started section of the manual and the Video tutorials before the class starts.
- A License Key will be provided via email to the class list
- We will use these Igor Programming Conventions to facilitate communication and improve clarity of programs]
Textbooks
- Introduction to Atmospheric Chemistry by Daniel Jacob, 1999. (see errata & Supp. Problems)
- Optional: Chemistry of the Upper and Lower Atmosphere: Theory, Experiments, and Applications by Barbara Finlayson-Pitts and James Pitts
- Optional: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics: from Air Pollution to Climate Change by John Seinfeld and Spyros Pandis
Homeworks
- Homeworks and instructions will be posted at http://tinyurl.com/hw-5151 Editable
Lectures, Reading, and Homeworks
These lectures are updated every year that the course is offered, so you should not print them ahead of time as they will likely change for the present year. Relevant printouts will be distributed at the start of every lecture.
Introduction
- Introduction to the Course
- Suggested reading: Chapter 1 of Finlayson-Pitts & Pitts
- Review of Chemistry
- Required reading: sections of General Chemistry Wikibook or This alternative resource or equivalent resources, if you don't have background or are not sure if you remember those sections: Atomic Structure, Compounds & Bonding, Chemical Reactions, Aqueous Solutions, Phases of Matter, Chemical Equilibria, Chemical Kinetics, and Thermodynamics. (NOT "Chemistry of the Various Elements")
- Required reading: Chapter 9 of Jacob
- Required simulation: PHET Gases
- Suggested reading: Kinetic Theory of Gases; More kinetic theory
- Introduction to Igor Pro
- Required reading: Getting Started in Igor
- Suggested viewing: Video Tutorials
- Required reading and use: Igor Programming Conventions
Fundamentals
- Measures of Atmospheric Composition
- Required reading: Chapter 1 of Jacob
- Atmospheric Structure
- Required reading: Chapter 2 & Section 4.3 of Jacob
- Atmospheric Chemistry Models
- Required reading: Chapter 3 of Jacob
- Suggested reading: Chapter 25 of Seinfeld & Pandis
- Spectroscopy and Photochemistry
- Required Reading: Chapters 3B, 3C, and 4 of Finlayson-Pitts & Pitts
- Resources: Max Planck UV-Vis database & TUV Model
- Chemical Kinetics
- Required Reading: Chapter 9 of Jacob
- Suggested Reading: Chapter 5A of Finlayson-Pitts & Pitts
- Resources: JPL Evaluation, IUPAC Evaluations, NIST Database, Leeds MCM
- Atmospheric Transport
- Required Reading: Chapter 4 and Chapter 5 of Jacob
- Resources: NASA aerosol simulation, Transport to Detling ground site (Credit: Dr. Scott Herndon, ARI),Animation of Transport of BC in SE Asia, SEAC4RS CO Movies
- Visit to NOAA "Science on a Sphere"
Applications
- Geochemical Cycles and the Carbon Cycle
- Required Reading: Chapter 6 of Jacob
- Suggested Reading: Chapter 22 of Seinfeld & Pandis
- Gas-Phase Organic + NOx Chemistry
- Required Reading: Chapter 11 and Chapter 12 of Jacob
- Suggested Reading: Chapters 6 & 7 of Finlayson-Pitts & Pitts
- Suggested Reading; A. Haagen-Smit, Chemistry and Physiology of Los Angeles Smog, 1952.
- Atmospheric Effects of Oil and Gas Production (invited lecturer: Dr. Jessica Gilman from NOAA)
- Required Reading: Gilman et al. ES&T
- Suggested Reading: DOE Shale Gas Primer
- Suggested Reading: Petron et al., Hydrocarbon emissions characterization in the Colorado Front Range: A pilot study, J. Geophys. Res.-Atmos., 2012.
- Aerosols
- Required Reading: Chapter 8 of Jacob
- Required Reading: Chapter 8 of Seinfeld & Pandis
- The Greenhouse Effect
- Required Reading: Chapter 7 of Jacob
- Suggested Reading: Chapters 23 & 24 of Seinfeld & Pandis
- Stratospheric Chemistry
- Required Reading: Chapter 10 of Jacob
- Suggested Reading: Chapters 12 & 13 of Finlayson-Pitts & Pitts
- Acid Deposition
- Required Reading: Chapter 13 of Jacob
- Suggested Reading: Chapter 8 of Finlayson-Pitts & Pitts
Resources
- Mixed-Layer model for approximate boundary layer calculations
- How an O3 Detector Works (intro video)
Reference Materials
Atmospheric Chemistry Courses at Other Universities
- by Prof. Colette Heald @ Colorado State Univ.
- by Prof. Sergey Nidkorodov, UC Irvine
- by Prof. Maggie Tolbert @ CU-Boulder (Spring 2011)
- by Prof. Daniel Jacob @ Harvard
- by Prof. Wayne @ Oxford
- by Prof. Russ Dickerson, Univ. of Maryland
- by Prof. Peter Briblecombe @ Univ. East Anglia, UK