-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 3
/
Copy pathapp_glossary.xml
555 lines (461 loc) · 22.3 KB
/
app_glossary.xml
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<glossary id="app_glossary">
<title>Appendix A. Glossary</title>
<glossdiv>
<title>A</title>
<comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Activity data</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Air quality model</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A model that predicts ambient air quality that accounts for impacts of meteorology, manmade emissions sources, and biogenic emissions sources. It simulates physical components such as advection, dispersion, clouds, dry and wet precipitation, air chemistry, particulate formation, to provide ambient air quality estimates of a variety of pollutants (such as ozone) and other chemical constituents.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Anthropogenic sources</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Manmade sources of emissions. All inventory source categories besides biogenic sources are considered to be anthropogenic sources.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_area_source">
<glossterm>Area source</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>An anthropogenic source category that is represented as a 2-d source, typically a county. In SMOKE, the term area source more specifically refers to a collection of source categories types that are not point sources and are not on-road mobile sources. SMOKE area sources are defined by country, state, and county codes and by source category codes (SCCs). Area sources are also referred to as stationary area sources and, in SMOKE, include nonroad mobile sources.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>B</title>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Base year</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Year for which an air quality modeling episode will be evaluated for model performance. Air quality modeling typically involves modeling a base year and comparing the model run to observational data. Once the meteorology and emissions data in the base year have been improved enough for adequate model performance, the emissions are grown to a future year and the model is run in the future with and without a control strategy.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_biogenic_source">
<glossterm>Biogenic source</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A natural source, or one that is not manmade. In SMOKE, biogenic sources include VOC emissions from vegetation and nitrous oxide emissions from soil. Volcanoes and other geothermal emissions, water emissions, and other biogenic sources are not included in SMOKE biogenic emissions components.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>C</title>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Chemical mechanism</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A set of chemical species and their interactions used to represent air chemistry (e.g., carbon bond 6 [CB6], Statewide Air Pollution Research Center [SAPRC]).</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_chemical_speciation">
<glossterm>Chemical speciation</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Convert the inventory pollutant data to the chemical species needed by the air quality model (e.g., VOC gets split to PAR, OLE, XYL, TOL, ISOP, and more).</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Control strategy</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</comment>
<comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Controls</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</comment>
<comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Criteria emissions</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Cross-reference file</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A dataset used for matching sources in the emissions inventory with profile data based on the source characteristics. Typically there can be thousands of records in a cross-reference file and tens or hundreds of thousands of records in an emissions inventory. The cross-reference file facilitates assigning conversion factors for emissions processing to records in the emissions inventory.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>E</title>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Elevated source</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A point source in which emissions are higher than the first model layer because of plume rise.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Emission inventory</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>An emission inventory is an accounting of the amount of air pollutants discharged into the atmosphere. It is generally characterized by the following factors:</para>
<itemizedlist spacing="compact">
<listitem>the chemical or physical identity of the pollutants included,</listitem>
<listitem>the geographic area covered,</listitem>
<listitem>the institutional entities covered,</listitem>
<listitem>the time period over which emissions are estimated, and</listitem>
<listitem>the types of activities that cause emissions.</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para>Emission inventories are developed for a variety of purposes. Inventories of natural and anthropogenic emissions are used by scientists as inputs to air quality models, by policy makers to develop strategies and policies or track progress of standards, and by facilities and regulatory agencies to establish compliance records with allowable emission rates. A well constructed inventory should include enough documentation and other data to allow readers to understand the underlying assumptions and to reconstruct the calculations for each of the estimates included.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Emissions processing</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Converting the resolution of emissions inventories (e.g. area, biogenic, mobile, and point sources) to the resolution needed by an air quality model (e.g., hourly, grid-cell, data of model species). It may also include growing data from one year to another year and applying emissions controls on the inventory. This process requires a large number of supplementary data files include gridding surrogates, cross-reference files, and factor profiles for chemical speciation and temporal allocation. It includes combining all source categories and ensuring that the emissions are in the format needed by a specific air quality model. Emissions processing typically includes quality assurance to increase user confidence that the data were converted as intended.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_environment_variable">
<glossterm>Environment variable</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Environment variables are how SMOKE communicates with its operating environment. There are several different uses for environment variables including assigning file names, setting options, and setting operating parameters.</para>
<para>An environment variable in the UNIX environment C-shell is defined using the <command>setenv</command> command. For example, to define the <envar>FILENAME</envar> environment variable to the file <filename>testfile.txt</filename> in the <filename class="directory">/home/user/</filename> directory, the following command is used:</para>
<para><userinput><command>setenv</command> <envar>FILENAME</envar> <filename>/home/user/testfile.txt</filename></userinput></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>F</title>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Fuel month</glossterm>
<glossdef><para>The concept of a fuel month is used to indicate when a particular set of fuel properties should be used in a MOVES simulation. The fuel month reduces the computational time of MOVES by using a single month to represent a set of months. To determine the fuel month and which months it is similar to, the user should review the State-provided fuel supply data in the MOVES database for each representative county. If the fuel supply data change thoughout the year, then roup the months by fuel parameters. For example, if the grams/mile exhaust emission rates in January are identical to February's rates for a given representative county, then use a single fuel month to represent January and Febuary. (Only one of the months needs to be modeled throuh MOVES)</para></glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Future year</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A year after the base year.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>G</title>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Grid</glossterm>
<glosssee otherterm="glossary_model_grid" />
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Grid projection</glossterm>
<glosssee otherterm="glossary_map_projection" />
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Gridding</glossterm>
<glosssee otherterm="glossary_spatial_allocation" />
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_gridding_surrogate">
<glossterm>Gridding surrogate</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A dataset developed from data at a finer resolution than the emissions, used to spatially allocate the emissions to the grid cells (e.g., population, housing, agricultural regions).</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>I</title>
<comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Inventory data</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Inventory pollutant</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A compound or group of compounds emitted into the atmosphere by anthropogenic and biogenic sources defined for record-keeping and regulatory purposes (e.g. carbon monoxide [CO], nitrogen oxides [NO<subscript>x</subscript>], volatile organic compounds [VOC], particulate matter 10 microns or less [PM<subscript>10</subscript>]).</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>L</title>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Lambert conformal</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A type of map projection.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Land use data</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Latitude/longitude (lat/lon)</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A spherical reference system used to measure locations on the Earth’s surface. Latitude and longitude are angles measured from the Earth’s center to locations on the Earth’s surface. Latitude measures angles in a north-south direction. Longitude measures angles in the east-west direction. In SMOKE, lat/lon refers to a map projection.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Layer</glossterm>
<glosssee otherterm="glossary_model_layers" />
</glossentry>
<comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Layer assignment</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Logical file names</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Environment variables that programs use to access files are called logical file names. In the <xref linkend="glossary_environment_variable" />, <envar>FILENAME</envar> is the logical file name for the physical file <filename>/home/user/testfile.txt</filename>. The I/O API is based on logical file names, and since SMOKE uses the I/O API for accessing all of its files, it too uses logical file names. The benefit of logical file names is that the programs do not require that the physical files always have the same name. Instead, the logical file names can be defined each time a program is run to use whatever physical file names the user would like. In <xref linkend="ch_input_files" />, <xref linkend="ch_intermediate_files" />, and <xref linkend="ch_output_files" />, the logical file names are used to reference the files, their associations with programs, and their formats.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Low-level point source</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A point source in the first model layer. A source that is not elevated.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>M</title>
<glossentry id="glossary_map_projection">
<glossterm>Map projection</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A mathematical model that transforms the locations of features on the Earth’s surface to locations on a two-dimensional surface. Because the Earth is three-dimensional, some method must be used to depict a map in two dimensions. Some projections preserve shape; others preserve accuracy of area, distance, or direction. Map projections project the Earth’s surface onto a flat plane. However, any such representation distorts some parameter of the Earth’s surface be it distance, area, shape, or direction.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Matrix</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Merging</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>In SMOKE, merging can refer to two steps. One, it can refer to combining the SMOKE processes for a single source category, such as combining the gridding information, the inventory, the temporal allocation, and the chemical speciation information to create model-ready emissions. Two, it can refer to combining all source categories together into a single model-ready file.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Meteorology data</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Simulated weather data required by SMOKE for biogenic sources, some mobile source processing, and some point source processing.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_mobile_source">
<glossterm>Mobile source</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>In the most general sense, a mobile source is simply a non-stationary source such as an on road vehicle, a construction vehicle, or a lawn mower. In SMOKE, the term mobile source more specifically refers to on-road vehicles. SMOKE mobile sources are defined by country, state, and county codes, by source category codes (SCCs) that include a road class code and a vehicle type code, and optionally by a link identification code. For SMOKE, mobile sources include only on-road mobile sources and NOT nonroad sources (which are treated as area sources).</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_model_domain">
<glossterm>Model domain</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>The grid on which a model will be run.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_model_grid">
<glossterm>Model grid</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A 2-d grid based on a map projection, defined by starting coordinates, number of grid cells in each direction, and the physical size of the grid cells. <comment>The example below shows a model grid with 81 cells (columns) in the x-direction and 75-cells (rows) in the y-direction. Each large grid in the diagram at right represents 10 36-km grid cells using a Lambert map projection.</comment></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_model_layers">
<glossterm>Model layers</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Vertical spatial divisions defined by an air quality model because the atmosphere has varied characteristics in the vertical direction.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_model_species">
<glossterm>Model species</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A compound or group of compounds defined as part of the estimation of air chemistry in an air quality model (e.g., CO, nitrogen oxide [NO], nitrogen dioxide [NO<subscript>2</subscript>], paraffins [PAR], elemental carbon, coarse [ECC]). Model species can be an actual chemical compound, ion, or group of compounds. Air quality models typically input emissions data for a subset of model species from a larger number of species in a full chemical mechanism.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>N</title>
<comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Non-point sources</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Nonroad mobile sources</glossterm>
<glosssee otherterm="glossary_area_source" />
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>O</title>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>On-road mobile source</glossterm>
<glosssee otherterm="glossary_mobile_source" />
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>P</title>
<comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Particulate emissions</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Past year</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A year prior to a base year.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Plume rise</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>The rising of the exhaust from point sources due to the velocity and temperature of the exhaust gases.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Plume-in-grid (PinG)</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A special treatment of elevated sources by which the plume rise is modeled with extra detail by the air quality model. The acronym for plume-in-grid is PinG or sometimes PIG.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_point_source">
<glossterm>Point source</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A point source is an emissions source that can be represented by a point in space, relative to the modeling domain. In SMOKE, a point source is defined by a country, state, and county code, a plant identification code, 1 to 5 additional user-defined attributed (such as stack code, process codes, and a source category code [SCC]). Point sources have other required attributes such as stack parameters.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Polar stereographic</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A type of map projection.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Profile data</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Factors used for disaggregating emissions data as is done during chemical speciation or temporal allocation.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Projection (grid)</glossterm>
<glosssee otherterm="glossary_map_projection" />
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Projection (temporal)</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Estimating past-year or future-year emissions from a base-year value and other factors.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>R</title>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Representative County</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Representative county is used to represent a set of counties that have the a constant set of fuel parameters (distribution of fuels over the year), fleet age distritution, inspection/maintenance (I/M) programs, similar community characteristics (e.g. urban vs rural) and similar meteorological conditions (e.g. temperature and relative humidity). Variables that can vary within the counties represented by a representative county include vehicle miles traveled (VMT), source type vehicle population, roadway speed and grid cell temperatures. By specifying a representative county the user is able to reduce the computational time of MOVES by using a single county to represent a set of counties.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>S</title>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Source category</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A general classification of emission sources for both emission inventory development and emissions modeling. The major source categories in SMOKE are area, biogenic, mobile, and point. Other source categories that are sometimes treated separately are offshore point sources, nonroad area sources, and Continuous Emissions Monitoring (CEM) sources.</para>
<glossseealso otherterm="glossary_area_source" />
<glossseealso otherterm="glossary_biogenic_source" />
<glossseealso otherterm="glossary_mobile_source" />
<glossseealso otherterm="glossary_point_source" />
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Source classification code (SCC)</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A code used in emission inventories to label emission sources as being part of a specific industrial, chemical, or natural processes of generating emissions.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Sparse Matrix Operator Kernel Emissions (SMOKE)</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A emissions data modeling system that prepares emissions data for use in air quality models. It converts the resolution of area, biogenic, mobile, and point source inventories into the hourly, gridded, model-species resolution needed by air quality models.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_spatial_allocation">
<glossterm>Spatial allocation</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Convert the source spatial extent to the grid cell resolution needed by the air quality model. For area sources, this process requires gridding surrogate data. For mobile link sources (line sources), this requires determining the cells intersected by the link and the fractions of the link in each cell. For point sources, this requires determining in which cell the point source falls.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Spatial surrogate</glossterm>
<glosssee otherterm="glossary_gridding_surrogate" />
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Speciation</glossterm>
<glosssee otherterm="glossary_chemical_speciation" />
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Species</glossterm>
<glosssee otherterm="glossary_model_species" />
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Stack parameters</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Attributes of point sources including stack height, stack diameter at the top (the point where exit gases flow from the stack), exit gas temperature at the top, exit gas velocity at the top, and exit gas flow at the top.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>T</title>
<glossentry id="glossary_temporal_allocation">
<glossterm>Temporal allocation</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Convert the inventory temporal resolution to the hourly temporal resolution needed by the air quality model.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry id="glossary_time_zone">
<glossterm>Time zone</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A region on the Earth assigned a specific zone relative to Greenwich Mean Time, defined as time zone 0.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<comment>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Toxic emissions</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</comment>
</glossdiv>
<glossdiv><title>U</title>
<glossentry id="glossary_universal_transverse_mercator">
<glossterm>Universal Transverse Mercator</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>Military grid projection based on the transverse Mercator projection, applied to maps of the Earth’s surface extending from the Equator to 84 degrees north and 80 degress south latitudes.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>UNIX</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para>A group of operating systems that conform to POSIX standards. Commonly used systems include Linux, SGI IRIX, Solaris (SunOS), and Mac OS X.</para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>UTM zone</glossterm>
<glosssee otherterm="glossary_universal_transverse_mercator" />
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
<comment>
<glossdiv><title>V</title>
<glossentry>
<glossterm>Vector</glossterm>
<glossdef>
<para></para>
</glossdef>
</glossentry>
</glossdiv>
</comment>
</glossary>