Published in Genetics and Environmental Business Week, January 3rd, 2008
A team of air quality modelers, climatologists and air policy specialists at Arizona State University may soon change that. Under a grant from the Environmental Protection Agency, they have developed a new way to close the gaps in the global pollution dragnet by using NASA satellite data to detect precursors to ozone pollution, also known as smog.
The technique, devised with the aid of health specialists from University of California at Berkeley, uses satellite data to...
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