J. Šakalys
5 Papers
101 Citations
J. Šakalys is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aerosol & Trace metal. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
Estimation of atmospheric trace metal emissions in Vilnius City, Lithuania, using vertical concentration gradient and road tunnel measurement data
TL;DR: In this article, a new approach for the estimation of trace metal emissions in Vilnius city was implemented, using vertical concentration profiles in the urban boundary layer and road tunnel measurement data.
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In-stack emissions of heavy metals estimated by moss biomonitoring method and snow-pack analysis
TL;DR: In this article, a semi-empirical model was proposed to describe atmospheric trace metal deposition close to the point pollution source, and it was estimated that in the vicinity of pollution source (within 30 km) about 15% out of total emitted metals were washed out by rain and snow events.
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Evaluation of the impact of long-range transport and aerosol concentration temporal variations at the eastern coast of the Baltic Sea.
TL;DR: It was found that most of the severe episodes occurred when air masses came from a specific site besides it was established that air masses of different origin were characterized by different mixing layer depth, and lower mixing depth was observed in air masses characterized by higher observed concentrations at the measuring site and vice versa.
15
Biogenic and anthropogenic organic matter in aerosol over continental Europe: source characterization in the east Baltic region
TL;DR: In this paper, an Aerodyne quadruple aerosol mass spectrometer (Q-AMS) has been used to provide on-line measurements of size dependent chemical composition of fine aerosol particles (PM1) at the Air Pollution Research Station in Preila, Lithuania, representing the east Baltic region.
8
Chemical Fluxes in North-east Atlantic Air
Darius Ceburnis,Colin D. O'Dowd,M. C. Facchini,L. Emblico,Stefano Decesari,J. Šakalys,S. G. Jennings +6 more
- 01 Jan 2007
TL;DR: O'Dowd et al. as mentioned in this paper developed and executed an alternative method for the estimation of chemical aerosol fluxes, based on a vertical concentration gradient measurement, at the coastal research station in Mace Head, Ireland.