Contributors ................................................... xi
Preface ....................................................... xxi
Section 1 Atmospheric Environmental Monitoring
Chapter 1 Air Pollution Monitoring
Systems—Past-Present-Future ......................... 3
U. Platt
Chapter 2 Radial Plume Mapping: A US EPA Test Method for
Area and Fugitive Source Emission Monitoring
Using Optical Remote Sensing ....................... 21
Ram A, Hashmonay, Ravi M. Varma, Mark T. Modrak,
Robert H. Kagann, Robin R. Segall, and
Patrick D. Sullivan
Chapter 3 MAX-DOAS Measurements of CIO, SO2 and NO2 in the
Mid-Latitude Coastal Boundary Layer and a Power
Plant Plume ........................................ 37
Chulkyu Lee, Young J. Kim, Hanlim Lee, and
Byeong C. Choi
Chapter 4 Laser Based Chemical Sensor Technology: Recent
Advances and Applications .......................... 50
Frank K. Tittel, Yury A. Bakhirkin,
Robert F. Curl, Anatoliy A. Kosterev,
Matthew R. McCurdy, Stephen G. So, and
Gerard Wysocki
Chapter 5 Atmospheric Monitoring With Chemical Ionisation
Reaction Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry
(CIR-TOF-MS) and Future Developments: Hadamard
Transform Mass Spectrometry ........................ 64
Kevin P. Wyche, Christopher Whyte,
Robert S. Blake, Rebecca L. Cordell,
Kerry A. Willis, Andrew M. Ellis, and
Paul S. Monks
Chapter 6 Continuous Monitoring and the Source
Identification Carbon Dioxide at Three Sites in
Northeast Asia During 2004-2005 .................... 77
Fenji Jin, Sungki Jung, Jooll Kim, K.-R. Kim,
T. Chen, Donghao Li, Y.-A. Piao, Y.-Y. Fang,
Q.-F. Yin, and Donkoo Lee
Chapter 7 Aircraft Measurements of Long-Range
Trans-Boundary Air Pollutants over Yellow Sea ...... 90
Sung-Nam Oh, Jun-Seok Cha, Dong-Won Lee, and
Jin-Su Choi
Chapter 8 Optical Remote Sensing for Characterizing the
Spatial Distribution of Stack Emissions ........... 107
Michel Grutter, Roberto Basaldud, Edgar Flores,
and Roland Harig
Section 2 Atmospheric Environmental Monitoring
Chapter 9 Mass Transport of Background Asian Dust Revealed
by Balloon-Borne Measurement: Dust Particles
Transported during Calm Periods by Westerly from
Taklamakan Desert ................................. 121
Y. Iwasaka, J.M. Li, G.-Y. Shi, Y.S. Kim,
A. Matsuki, D. Trochkine, M. Yamada, D. Zhang,
Z. Shen, and C.S. Hong
Chapter 10 Identifying Atmospheric Aerosols with
Polarization Lidar ................................ 136
Kenneth Sassen
Chapter 11 A Novel Method to Quantify Fugitive Dust
Emissions Using Optical Remote Sensing ............ 143
Ravi M. Varma, Ram A. Hashmonay, Ke Du,
Mark J. Rood, Byung J. Kim, and Michael R. Kemme
Chapter 12 Raman Lidar for Monitoring of Aerosol Pollution
in the Free Troposphere ........................... 155
Detlef Müller, Ina Mattis, Albert Ansmann,
Ulla Wandinger, and Dietrich Althausen
Chapter 13 An Innovative Approach to Optical Measurement of
Atmospheric Aerosols-Determination of the Size
and the Complex Refractive Index of Single
Aerosol Particles ................................. 167
Wladyslaw W. Szymanski, Artur Golczewski,
Attila Nagy, Peter Gál, and Aladar Czitrovszky
Chapter 14 Remote Sensing of Aerosols by Sunphotometer and
Lidar Techniques .................................. 179
Anna M. Tafuro, F. De Tomasi, and
Maria R. Perrone
Chapter 15 Retrieval of Particulate Matter from MERIS
Observations ...................................... 190
Wolfgang von Hoyningen-Huene,
Alexander Kokhanovsky, and John P. Burrows
Chapter 16 Bioaerosol Standoff Monitoring Using Intensified
Range-Gated Laser-Induced Fluorescence
Spectroscopy ...................................... 203
Sylvie Buteau, Jean-R. Simard, Pierre Lahaie,
Gilles Roy, Pierre Mathieu, Bernard Déry,
Jim Ho, and John McFee
Chapter 17 MODIS 500 x 500-m2 Resolution Aerosol Optical
Thickness Retrieval and Its Application for Air
Quality Monitoring ................................ 217
Kwon H. Lee, Dong H. Lee, Young J. Kim, and
Jhoon Kim
Section 3 Contaminant-Control Process Monitoring
Chapter 18 Aquatic Colloids: Provenance, Characterization
and Significance to Environmental Monitoring ...... 233
Jae-Il Kim
Chapter 19 Progress in Earthworm Ecotoxicology ............... 248
Byung-Tae Lee, Kyung-Hee Shin, Ju-Yong Kim, and
Kyoung-Woong Kim
Chapter 20 Differentiating Effluent Organic Matter (ЕfOМ)
from Natural Organic Matter (NOM): Impact of
EfOM on Drinking Water Sources .................... 259
Seong-Nam Nam, Stuart W. Krasner, and
Gary L. Amy
Chapter 21 An Advanced Monitoring and Control System for
Optimization of the Ozone-AOP (Advanced
Oxidation Process) for the Treatment of Drinking
Water ............................................. 271
Joon-Wun Kang, Byung Soo Oh, Sang Yeon Park,
Tae-Mun Hwang, Hyun Je Oh, and Youn Kyoo Choung
Chapter 22 Monitoring of Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC) in
a Water Treatment Process by UV-Laser Induced
Fluorescence ...................................... 282
Uwe Wachsmuth, Matthias Niederkrüger,
Gerd Marowsky, Norbert Konradt, and
Hans-Peter Rohns
Section 4 Biosensors, Bioanalytical and Biomonitoring
Systems
Chapter 23 Biosensors for Environmental and Human Health ..... 297
Peter-D. Hansen
Chapter 24 Biological Toxicity Testing of Heavy Metals and
Environmental Samples Using Fluorescence-Based
Oxygen Sensing and Respirometry ................... 312
Alice Zitova, Fiach C. O'Mahony, Maud Cross,
John Davenport, and Dmitri B. Papkovsky
Chapter 25 Omics Tools for Environmental Monitoring of
Chemicals, Radiation, and Physical Stresses in
Saccharomyces cerevisiae .......................... 325
Yoshihide Tanaka, Tetsuji Higashi,
Randeep Rakwal, Junko Shibato, Emiko Kitagawa,
Satomi Murata, Shin-ichi Wakida, and
Hitoshi Iwahashi
Chapter 26 Gene Expression Characteristics in the Japanese
Medaka (Oryzias latipes) Liver after Exposure to
Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals .................... 338
Han Na Kim, Kyeong Seo Park, Sung Kyu Lee, and
Man Bock Gu
Chapter 27 Optical Detection of Pathogens using Protein
Chip .............................................. 348
Jeong-Woo Choi and Byung-Keun Oh
Chapter 28 Expression Analysis of Sex-Specific and
Endocrine-Disruptors-Responsive Genes in
Japanese Medaka, Oryzias latipes, using
Oligonucleotide Microarrays ....................... 363
Katsuyuki Kishi, Emiko Kitagawa,
Hitoshi Iwahashi, Tomotaka Ippongi,
Hiroshi Kawauchi, Keisuke Nakazono,
Masato Inoue, Hiroyoshi Ohba, and
Yasuyuki Hayashi
Chapter 29 Assessment of the Hazard Potential of
Environmental Chemicals by Quantifying Fish
Behaviour ......................................... 376
Daniela Baganz and Georg Staaks
Chapter 30 Biomonitoring Studies Performed with European
Eel Populations from the Estuaries of Minho,
Lima and Douro Rivers (NW Portugal) ............... 390
Carlos Gravato, Melissa Faria, Anabela Alves,
Joana Santos, and Lúcia Guilhermino
Chapter 31 In Vitro Testing of Inhalable Fly Ash at the Air
Liquid Interface .................................. 402
Sonja Mülhopt, Hanns-Rudolf Paur,
Silvia Diabaté, and Harald F. Krug
List of Abbreviations ......................................... 415
Index ......................................................... 416
|