نتایج جستجو برای: oil slick transport

تعداد نتایج: 410326  

Journal: :Environmental management 2011
Taina Ihaksi Teemu Kokkonen Inari Helle Ari Jolma Tiina Lecklin Sakari Kuikka

Increasing oil transportation and severe oil accidents in the past have led to the development of various sensitivity maps in different countries all over the world. Often, however, the areas presented on the maps are far too large to be safeguarded with the available oil combating equipment and prioritization is required to decide which areas must be safeguarded. While oil booms can be applied...

2014
Roger C. Prince Josh D. Butler

Dispersants are important tools in oil spill response. Taking advantage of the energy in even small waves, they disperse floating oil slicks into tiny droplets (<70 μm) that entrain in the water column and drift apart so that they do not re-agglomerate to re-form a floating slick. The dramatically increased surface area allows microbial access to much more of the oil, and diffusion and dilution...

2015
Greg T. Drozd David R. Worton Christoph Aeppli Christopher M. Reddy Haofei Zhang Allen H. Goldstein

Releases of hydrocarbons from oil spills have large environmental impacts in both the ocean and atmosphere. Oil evaporation is not simply a mechanism of mass loss from the ocean, as it also causes production of atmospheric pollutants. Monitoring atmospheric emissions from oil spills must include a broad range of volatile organic compounds (VOC), including intermediate-volatile and semivolatile ...

2003
Carol Hunter

J ust after midnight on March 24, 1989, the giant oil tanker Exxon Valdez ran aground on Bligh Reef off the coast of Alaska, spilling almost 21 million gallons of crude oil into the sea. The disaster caused an oil slick that covered 3,000 square miles and contaminated 1,090 miles of coastline along the pristine Prince William Sound, killing thousands of marine creatures and costing Exxon $1.28 ...

Journal: :Journal of hazardous materials 1999
D E Hibbs J S Gulliver V R Voller Y F Chen

A numerical model is developed to predict the aqueous concentrations of sparingly soluble compounds resulting from oil, fuel, or chemical spills onto rivers. The model computes the concentration of compounds both in the slick phase and in the aqueous phase by simulating the processes that affect the fate of the spilled compound. Processes simulated by the model include spreading and drifting of...

Journal: :International Journal of Environmental Science & Technology 2010

Journal: :Remote Sensing 2018
Merv Fingas

The thickness of oil spills on the sea is an important but poorly studied topic. Means to measure slick thickness are reviewed. More than 30 concepts are summarized. Many of these are judged not to be viable for a variety of scientific reasons. Two means are currently available to remotely measure oil thickness, namely, passive microwave radiometry and time of acoustic travel. Microwave radiome...

2014
Maria A. Tejada Kathleen Stople Sofia Hammami Bomholtz Anne-Kristine Meinild Asser Nyander Poulsen Dan A. Klaerke

Slick (Slo2.1) and Slack (Slo2.2) channels belong to the family of high-conductance K+ channels and have been found widely distributed in the CNS. Both channels are activated by Na+ and Cl- and, in addition, Slick channels are regulated by ATP. Therefore, the roles of these channels in regulation of cell excitability as well as ion transport processes, like regulation of cell volume, have been ...

2014
Andrea Buono Rafael Lemos Paes Ferdinando Nunziata Maurizio Migliaccio José dos Campos

In this paper, a review of Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR)-based techniques, for oil slick at sea observation is proposed, focusing in particular on polarimetric approaches. In fact, marine oil pollution monitoring is a topic of great applicative and scientific relevance and in such a context, among all remote sensing sensors, SAR represents a fundamental tool due to its almost all-weather and a...

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