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Dive into the research topics where Charles Chemel is active.

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Featured researches published by Charles Chemel.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2015

Meteorology, air quality, and health in London: The ClearfLo project

Sylvia I. Bohnenstengel; Stephen E. Belcher; A. C. Aiken; J. D. Allan; G. Allen; Asan Bacak; Thomas J. Bannan; Janet F. Barlow; David C. S. Beddows; William J. Bloss; Am Booth; Charles Chemel; Omduth Coceal; C. Di Marco; Manvendra K. Dubey; K.H. Faloon; Zoe L. Fleming; Markus Furger; Johanna K. Gietl; R. Graves; David Green; C. S. B. Grimmond; Christos Halios; Jacqueline F. Hamilton; Roy M. Harrison; Mathew R. Heal; Dwayne E. Heard; Carole Helfter; Scott C. Herndon; R.E. Holmes

AbstractAir quality and heat are strong health drivers, and their accurate assessment and forecast are important in densely populated urban areas. However, the sources and processes leading to high concentrations of main pollutants, such as ozone, nitrogen dioxide, and fine and coarse particulate matter, in complex urban areas are not fully understood, limiting our ability to forecast air quality accurately. This paper introduces the Clean Air for London (ClearfLo; www.clearflo.ac.uk) project’s interdisciplinary approach to investigate the processes leading to poor air quality and elevated temperatures.Within ClearfLo, a large multi-institutional project funded by the U.K. Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), integrated measurements of meteorology and gaseous, and particulate composition/loading within the atmosphere of London, United Kingdom, were undertaken to understand the processes underlying poor air quality. Long-term measurement infrastructure installed at multiple levels (street and eleva...


Monthly Weather Review | 2009

Quantifying the imprint of a severe Hector thunderstorm during ACTIVE/SCOUT-O3 onto the water content in the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere

Charles Chemel; M. R. Russo; J. A. Pyle; Ranjeet S. Sokhi; Cornelius Schiller

Abstract The development of a severe Hector thunderstorm that formed over the Tiwi Islands, north of Australia, during the Aerosol and Chemical Transport in Tropical Convection/Stratospheric-Climate Links with Emphasis on the Upper Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere (ACTIVE/SCOUT-O3) field campaign in late 2005, is simulated by the Advanced Research Weather Research and Forecasting (ARW) model and the Met Office Unified Model (UM). The general aim of this paper is to investigate the role of isolated deep convection over the tropics in regulating the water content in the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere (UT/LS). Using a horizontal resolution as fine as 1 km, the numerical simulations reproduce the timing, structure, and strength of Hector fairly well when compared with field campaign observations. The sensitivity of results from ARW to horizontal resolution is investigated by running the model in a large-eddy simulation mode with a horizontal resolution of 250 m. While refining the horizontal resolutio...


Journal of Environmental Management | 2012

Odour-impact assessment around a landfill site from weather-type classification, complaint inventory and numerical simulation

Charles Chemel; Caroline Riesenmey; Mireille Batton-Hubert; Hervé Vaillant

Gases released from landfill sites into the atmosphere have the potential to cause olfactory nuisances within the surrounding communities. Landfill sites are often located over complex topography for convenience mainly related to waste disposal and environmental masking. Dispersion of odours is strongly conditioned by local atmospheric dynamics. Assessment of odour impacts needs to take into account the variability of local atmospheric dynamics. In this study, we discuss a method to assess odour impacts around a landfill site located over complex terrain in order to provide information to be used subsequently to identify management strategies to reduce olfactory nuisances in the residential neighbourhoods. A weather-type classification is defined in order to identify meteorological conditions under which olfactory nuisances are to be expected. A non-steady state Gaussian model and a full-physics meteorological model are used to predict olfactory nuisances, for both the winter and summer scenarios that lead to the majority of complaints in neighbourhoods surrounding the landfill site. Simulating representative scenarios rather than full years make a high resolution simulation of local atmospheric dynamics in space and time possible. Results underline the key role of local atmospheric dynamics in driving the dispersion of odours. The odour concentration simulated by the full-physics meteorological model is combined with the density of the population in order to calculate an average population exposure for the two scenarios. Results of this study are expected to provide helpful information to develop technical solutions for an effective management of landfill operations, which would reduce odour impacts within the surrounding communities.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2011

Predictions of U.K. Regulated Power Station Contributions to Regional Air Pollution and Deposition: A Model Comparison Exercise

Charles Chemel; Ranjeet S. Sokhi; Anthony J. Dore; Paul Sutton; Keith Vincent; Stephen J. Griffiths; Garry D. Hayman; Raymond D. Wright; Matthew Baggaley; Stephen Hallsworth; H. Douglas Prain; Bernard Fisher

ABSTRACT Contributions of the emissions from a U.K. regulated fossil-fuel power station to regional air pollution and deposition are estimated using four air quality modeling systems for the year 2003. The modeling systems vary in complexity and emphasis in the way they treat atmospheric and chemical processes, and include the Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) modeling system in its versions 4.6 and 4.7, a nested modeling system that combines long- and short-range impacts (referred to as TRACK-ADMS [Trajectory Model with Atmospheric Chemical Kinetics–Atmospheric Dispersion Modelling System]), and the Fine Resolution Atmospheric Multi-pollutant Exchange (FRAME) model. An evaluation of the baseline calculations against U.K. monitoring network data is performed. The CMAQ modeling system version 4.6 data set is selected as the reference data set for the model footprint comparison. The annual mean air concentration and total deposition footprints are summarized for each modeling system. The footprints of the power station emissions can account for a significant fraction of the local impacts for some species (e.g., more than 50% for SO2 air concentration and non-sea-salt sulfur deposition close to the source) for 2003. The spatial correlation and the coefficient of variation of the root mean square error (CVRMSE) are calculated between each model footprint and that calculated by the CMAQ modeling system version 4.6. The correlation coefficient quantifies model agreement in terms of spatial patterns, and the CVRMSE measures the magnitude of the difference between model footprints. Possible reasons for the differences between model results are discussed. Finally, implications and recommendations for the regulatory assessment of the impact of major industrial sources using regional air quality modeling systems are discussed in the light of results from this case study. IMPLICATIONS Modeling tools are required to assess the contribution of industrial sources to ambient levels of air pollution, acid deposition, and eutrophication. This study evaluates the performance characteristics of regional air quality modeling systems in predicting contributions of the emissions from a U.K. regulated fossil-fuel power station to regional air pollution and deposition. It contrasts acid deposition modeling approaches used in the United Kingdom and demonstrates the sensitivity of the modeling systems to large emission changes. This work suggests considering an ensemble average of model calculations to provide an estimate of the uncertainty associated with an industrial source footprint.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2017

Coordinated Airborne Studies in the Tropics (CAST)

N. R. P. Harris; Lucy J. Carpenter; James Lee; G. Vaughan; Michal T. Filus; Roderic L. Jones; Bin Ouyang; J. A. Pyle; A. D. Robinson; Stephen J. Andrews; Alastair C. Lewis; Jamie Minaeian; Adam Vaughan; J. R. Dorsey; Martin Gallagher; M. Le Breton; Richard D. A. Newton; Carl J. Percival; Hugo Ricketts; S. J.-B. Bauguitte; G. J. Nott; Axel Wellpott; M. J. Ashfold; Johannes Flemming; Robyn Butler; Paul I. Palmer; Paul H. Kaye; C. Stopford; Charles Chemel; Hartmut Boesch

This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from the American Meteorological Society via http://dx.doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-14-00290.1


Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2014

Evolution of Cold-Air-Pooling Processes in Complex Terrain

Paul Burns; Charles Chemel

Elucidating cold-air-pooling processes forms part of the longstanding problem of parametrizing the effects of complex terrain in larger-scale numerical models. The Weather Research and Forecasting model has been set-up and run at high resolution over an idealized alpine-valley domain with a width of order 10 km, to investigate the four-dimensional variation of key cold-air-pooling forcing mechanisms, under decoupled stable conditions. Results of the simulation indicated that the total average valley-atmosphere cooling is driven by a complex balance/interplay between radiation and dynamical effects. Three fairly distinct regimes in the evolution of cold-air-pooling processes have been identified. Starting about 1 h before sunset, there is an initial 30-min period when the downslope flows are initiated and the total average valley-atmosphere instantaneous cooling is dominated by radiative heat loss. A period of instability follows, when there is a competition between radiation and dynamical effects, lasting some 90 min. Finally, there is a gradual reduction of the contribution of radiative cooling from 75 to 37 %. The maximum cold-air-pool intensity corresponds to the time of minimum radiative cooling, within the period of instability. Although, once the flow is established, the valley atmosphere cools at broadly similar rates by radiation and dynamical effects, overall, radiation effects dominate the total average valley-atmosphere cooling. Some of the intricacies of the valley mixing have been revealed. There are places where the dynamics dominate the cooling and radiation effects are minor. Characteristics of internal gravity waves propagating away from the slopes are discussed.


Atmospheric Environment | 2016

Valley heat deficit as a bulk measure of wintertime particulate air pollution in the Arve River Valley

Charles Chemel; Gabriele Arduini; Chantal Staquet; Yann Largeron; D. Legain; Diane Tzanos; Alexandre Paci

Urbanized valleys are particularly vulnerable to particulate air pollution during the winter, when groundbased stable layers or cold-air pools persist over the valley floor. We examine whether the temporal variability of PM10 concentration in the section of the Arve River Valley between Cluses and Servoz in the French Alps can be explained by the temporal variability of the valley heat deficit, a bulk measure of atmospheric stability within the valley. We do this on the basis of temperature profile and ground-based PM10 concentration data collected during wintertime with a temporal resolution of 1 h or finer, as part of the Passy-2015 field campaign conducted around Passy in this section of valley. The valley heat deficit was highly correlated with PM10 concentration on a daily time scale. The hourly variability of PM10 concentrations was more complex and cannot be explained solely by the hourly variability of the valley heat deficit. The interplay of the diurnal cycles of emissions and local dynamics is demonstrated and a drainage mechanism for observed nocturnal dilution of near-surface PM10 concentrations is proposed.


Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2013

Characterization of Oscillatory Motions in the Stable Atmosphere of a Deep Valley

Yann Largeron; Chantal Staquet; Charles Chemel

In a valley sheltered from strong synoptic effects, the dynamics of the valley atmosphere at night is dominated by katabatic winds. In a stably stratified atmosphere, these winds undergo temporal oscillations, whose frequency is given by


Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2015

Pollutant Dispersion in a Developing Valley Cold-Air Pool

Charles Chemel; Paul Burns


Archive | 2008

On the Suppression of the Urban Heat Island over Mountainous Terrain in Winter

Charles Chemel; J.-P. Chollet; Eric Chaxel

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Ranjeet S. Sokhi

University of Hertfordshire

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Chantal Staquet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Renate Forkel

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology

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J.-P. Chollet

Joseph Fourier University

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Guido Pirovano

World Meteorological Organization

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Efisio Solazzo

University of Birmingham

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Eric Chaxel

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Guillaume Brulfert

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-Pierre Chollet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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