Mobile sources include motor vehicles, aircraft, seagoing vessels, and other transportation modes. The mobile source related pollutants are carbon monoxide (CO), volatile organic compounds (VOCs), nitrogen oxides (NOx), and small particulate matter (PM10).
Mobile sources are referred to as contributors to pollution. Some examples include motor vehicles, aircraft, seagoing vessels, and other transportation modes. The mobile source-related pollutants are carbon monoxide (CO), hydrocarbons (HC), nitrogen oxides (NOx), and small particulate matter (PM-10).
Moving objects that release pollution; mobile sources include cars, trucks, buses, planes, trains, motorcycles and gasoline-powered lawn mowers. Mobile sources are divided into two groups: road vehicles, which includes cars, trucks and buses, and non-road vehicles, which includes trains, planes and lawn mowers.
In the most general sense, a mobile source is simply a non-stationary source such as an on road vehicle, a construction vehicle, or a lawn mower. In SMOKE, the term mobile source more specifically refers to on-road vehicles. SMOKE mobile sources are defined by country, state, and county codes, by source category codes (SCCs) that include a road class code and a vehicle type code, and optionally by a link identification code. For SMOKE, mobile sources include only on-road mobile sources and NOT nonroad sources (which are treated as area sources).
A segment of the area source classification representing transportation sources such as wheeled vehicles, ships, aircraft and railroad locomotives.
a moving source of air pollution; includes cars, trucks, motorcycles, and airplanes
A moving producer of air pollution, mainly forms of transportation - cars, motorcycles, planes.
a moving source that emits air pollutants
Mobile sources of pollutants include motor vehicles, aircraft, seagoing vessels, and other transportation modes.
Any non-stationary source of air pollution such as cars, trucks, motorcycles, buses, airplanes, locomotives.
Moving sources that release pollution. There are two categories. On-Road sources include cars, trucks, and buses. Non-road sources include trains, planes, and boats.
A moving source of pollution, such as a car or truck.
pollution sources that move around, such as cars, trucks, and buses.
A category of pollution sources that release emissions as they travel, for example, automobiles, ships, etc. Compare stationary source.