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Spatio-temporal characteristics of PM10 concentration across Malaysia

The recurrence of forest fires in Southeast Asia and associated biomass burning, has contributed markedly to the problem of trans-boundary haze and the long-range movement of pollutants in the region. Air pollutants, specifically particulate matter in the atmosphere, have received extensive attentio...

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Published in:Atmospheric environment (1994) 2009-09, Vol.43 (30), p.4584-4594
Main Authors: Juneng, Liew, Latif, Mohd Talib, Tangang, Fredolin T., Mansor, Haslina
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c503t-3bb0167c7af19ce77992d1d7c065fcade002f251fd31dc8345221f76110504a53
cites cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c503t-3bb0167c7af19ce77992d1d7c065fcade002f251fd31dc8345221f76110504a53
container_end_page 4594
container_issue 30
container_start_page 4584
container_title Atmospheric environment (1994)
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creator Juneng, Liew
Latif, Mohd Talib
Tangang, Fredolin T.
Mansor, Haslina
description The recurrence of forest fires in Southeast Asia and associated biomass burning, has contributed markedly to the problem of trans-boundary haze and the long-range movement of pollutants in the region. Air pollutants, specifically particulate matter in the atmosphere, have received extensive attention, mainly because of their adverse effect on people's health. In this study, the spatial and temporal variability of the PM10 concentration across Malaysia was analyzed by means of the rotated principal component analysis. The results suggest that the variability of the PM10 concentration can be decomposed into four dominant modes, each characterizing different spatial and temporal variations. The first mode characterizes the southwest coastal region of the Malaysian Peninsular with the PM10 showing a peak concentration during the summer monsoon i.e. when the winds are predominantly southerlies or southwesterlies, and a minimal concentration during the winter monsoon. The second mode features the region of western Borneo with the PM10 exhibiting a concentration surge in August–September, which is likely to be the result of the northward shift of the Inter Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) and the subsequent rapid arrival of the rainy season. The third mode delineates the northern region of the Malaysian Peninsular with strong bimodality in the PM10 concentration. Seasonally, this component exhibits two concentration maxima during the late winter and summer monsoons, as well as two minima during the inter-monsoon periods. The fourth dominant mode characterizes the northern Borneo region which exhibits weaker seasonality of the PM10 concentration. Generally, the seasonal fluctuation of the PM10 concentration is largely associated with the seasonal variation of rainfall in the country. However, in addition to this, the PM10 concentration also fluctuates markedly in two timescale bands i.e. 10–20 days quasi-biweekly (QBW) and 30–60 days lower frequency (LF) band of the intra-seasonal timescales. These intra-seasonal fluctuations show strong seasonality with the largest fraction of variance occurring during the boreal summer and the weakest variance during the winter. Generally, the LF intra-seasonal oscillation is stronger compared to the QBW intra-seasonal band.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2009.06.018
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identifier ISSN: 1352-2310
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subjects Applied sciences
Atmospheric pollution
Earth, ocean, space
Exact sciences and technology
External geophysics
Fluctuation
Intra-seasonal variation
Marine
Meteorology
Monsoons
PM10
Pollutants
Pollution
Principal component analysis
Seasonality
Spatio-temporal modeling
Summer
Temporal logic
Time-series analysis
Variance
Winter
title Spatio-temporal characteristics of PM10 concentration across Malaysia
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