S
Scott D. Chambers
Researcher at Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation
Publications - 113
Citations - 3637
Scott D. Chambers is an academic researcher from Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation. The author has contributed to research in topics: Radon & Environmental science. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 96 publications receiving 2997 citations. Previous affiliations of Scott D. Chambers include University of Alaska Fairbanks.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Dry season aerosol iron solubility in tropical northern Australia
V. Holly L. Winton,V. Holly L. Winton,Ross Edwards,Andrew R. Bowie,Melita Keywood,Alistair G. Williams,Scott D. Chambers,Paul Selleck,Maximilien Desservettaz,Marc Mallet,Clare Paton-Walsh +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present dry season soluble Fe data from the Savannah Fires in the Early Dry Season (SAFIRED) campaign in northern Australia that reflects coincident dust and biomass burning sources of soluble aerosol Fe.
Journal ArticleDOI
Constraining annual and seasonal radon-222 flux density from the Southern Ocean using radon-222 concentrations in the boundary layer at Cape Grim
Wlodek Zahorowski,Alan D. Griffiths,Scott D. Chambers,Alastair G. Williams,Rachel M. Law,Jagoda Crawford,Sylvester Werczynski +6 more
TL;DR: In this article, a method is described for selecting hourly radon concentrations that are least perturbated by land emissions and dilution by the free troposphere, which is representative of a large area of the Southern Ocean, an important fetch region for Southern Hemisphere climate and air pollution studies.
Journal ArticleDOI
Radon-222 related influence on ambient gamma dose.
A. Melintescu,Scott D. Chambers,Jagoda Crawford,Alastair G. Williams,Bogdan Zorilă,D. Galeriu +5 more
TL;DR: Combined use of the automated event detection method and the simple model of this study could enable the ambient gamma dose "attention limit" to be reduced from 200 to 400% above background to 25-50%.
Journal ArticleDOI
Identifying tropospheric baseline air masses at Mauna Loa Observatory between 2004 and 2010 using Radon-222 and back trajectories
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used 7 years of hourly radon observations at Mauna Loa Observatory (MLO), together with 10-day back trajectories, to identify baseline air masses at the station.
Journal ArticleDOI
Biomass burning emissions in north Australia during the early dry season: an overview of the 2014 SAFIRED campaign
Marc Mallet,Maximilien Desservettaz,Branka Miljevic,Andelija Milic,Zoran Ristovski,Joel Alroe,Luke T. Cravigan,E. Rohan Jayaratne,Clare Paton-Walsh,David W. T. Griffith,Stephen R. Wilson,Graham Kettlewell,Marcel van der Schoot,Paul Selleck,Fabienne Reisen,Sarah Lawson,Jason Ward,James Harnwell,Min Cheng,R. W. Gillett,Suzie B. Molloy,Dean Howard,Peter F. Nelson,Anthony Morrison,Grant C. Edwards,Alastair G. Williams,Scott D. Chambers,Sylvester Werczynski,Leah R. Williams,V. Holly L. Winton,V. Holly L. Winton,Brad Atkinson,Xianyu Wang,Melita Keywood +33 more
TL;DR: The SAFIRED (Savannah Fires in the Early Dry Season) campaign took place from 29 May until 30 June 2014 at the Australian Tropical Atmospheric Research Station (ATARS) in the Northern Territory, Australia as discussed by the authors.