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Srishti Jain

Researcher at Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

Publications -  13
Citations -  752

Srishti Jain is an academic researcher from Council of Scientific and Industrial Research. The author has contributed to research in topics: Particle & Mass concentration (chemistry). The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 13 publications receiving 453 citations. Previous affiliations of Srishti Jain include Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research.

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Seasonal characteristics of aerosols (PM2.5 and PM10) and their source apportionment using PMF: A four year study over Delhi, India

TL;DR: Conditional Bivariate Probability Function plots revealed that the maximum concentrations of PM2.5 and PM10 were carried by north westerly winds (north-western Indo Gangetic Plains of India) and the seasonal differences in VE contributions were not very striking.
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Source Apportionment of PM2.5 in Delhi, India Using PMF Model.

TL;DR: Strong seasonal variation was observed in PM2.5 mass concentration and its chemical composition with maxima during winter and minima during monsoon.
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Source apportionment of PM10 in Delhi, India using PCA/APCS, UNMIX and PMF

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the PM10 chemical composition (organic carbon (OC), elemental carbon (EC), water soluble inorganic ions (WSIC), and trace elements) for source apportionment.
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Chemical characteristics and source apportionment of PM2.5 using PCA/APCS, UNMIX, and PMF at an urban site of Delhi, India

TL;DR: Cluster and PSCF results indicated that local as well as long-transported PM2.5 from the north-west India and Pakistan were mostly pertinent, and re-confirmed that secondary aerosols, soil/road dust, vehicular emissions, biomass burning, fossil fuel combustion, and industrial emission were dominant contributors to PM 2.5 in Delhi.
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Spatio-temporal variation in chemical characteristics of PM10 over Indo Gangetic Plain of India

TL;DR: A strong seasonal variation was observed in the mass concentration of PM10 as well as in its chemical composition over the three locations, and backward trajectory analysis indicated the influence of continental type aerosols being transported from the Bay of Bengal, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Rajasthan, Gujarat, and surrounding areas to IGP region.