Topic: Principles of Environmental Science
Description: [?]Preferred language style: English (U.S.)• Choose a problem that interests you.
• It must have a physical/chemical environmental science component and
be amenable to
quantitative analysis.
• Your task is to write a technical brie?ng paper on your problem
(imagine you have been hired
as a consultant or delegated by your employer to solve the problem).
• The paper should describe the problem, present a review of the
scienti?c principles involved,
outline a simple model, and use the model to solve the problem or
recommend the next steps in
solving the problem.
• The aim is to think the problem through, distilling the essence of
the problem, which can then
be handled with a back-of-the-envelope small set of calculations.
• Be sure that your model is integrated into the text description of
your project. Motivate the
model, describe how it works and interpret the results, using these
results to underpin your
conclusions. In technical prose, about half your persuasive power
rests on your words and
about half on your numbers, and everything depends upon making the two
work together.
• You may ?nd Excel (or other more sophisticated programming tools)
useful when problems
get a bit more complex than those in the problem sets. You are
strongly encouraged to do this.
• You can pick a big problem like the effect of anthropogenic CO2 on
global climate change or
a small one, such as how to grow a good lawn without allowing excess
nitrogen fertilizer to run
off or leach downwards.Informal guidelines:
– state the problem
– simplify the problem
(develop a model that can be quanti?ed, draw diagram)
– obtain input values & assumptions
– do calculations, get numbers
– interpret results (so what?)
– explore parameter space (what if?)
– offer advice
(policy, management decision, personal behavior, …)