Point source pollution explained
A point source of pollution is a single identifiable source of air, water, thermal, noise or light pollution. A point source has negligible extent, distinguishing it from other pollution source geometries (such as nonpoint source or area source). The sources are called point sources because in mathematical modeling, they can be approximated as a mathematical point to simplify analysis.[1] Pollution point sources are identical to other physics, engineering, optics, and chemistry point sources and include:
See also
References
- Book: van Leeuwen, C.J. . Risk Assessment of Chemicals: An Introduction, 2nd Ed.. Springer . 2010 . 978-1-4020-6101-1 . Dordrecht, The Netherlands .
- Web site: Air Pollution Emissions Overview . . 2016-06-08 . U.S. Environmental Protection Agency . Washington, D.C..
- Book: 2001 . Harrison . Roy M. . Pollution: Causes, Effects and Control . 4th . Cambridge, UK . Royal Society of Chemistry . 2 . 0-85404-621-6.
- United States. Clean Water Act. Section 402(p), .
- Web site: Point sources . . Sound Waves . University of Southampton . 2018-01-24.
- Web site: Environmental Noise Propagation . Brüel & Kjær, Nærum, Denmark . Noise Pollution Clearinghouse . Montpelier, VT . 2018-01-24.
- Web site: Estimating the uncertainty of seismic point source solutions . Stähler, Simon . Hosseini, Kasra . Zhang, Ran . Sigloch, Karin . 2014 . Conference: EGU General Assembly 2014, held 27 April - 2 May, 2014 in Vienna, Austria, id.9911.
- Web site: Light Pollution Sources . . Night Skies . U.S. National Park Service . 2018-01-24.