environmental research instrument News
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LI-COR Expands Availability of Environmental Research Tools
As the demand for atmospheric monitoring, world food production, and water quality continue to increase, the demand for research-grade instrumentation worldwide also increases. LI-COR continues to look for ways to provide scientists worldwide the instrumentation necessary to answer their research questions. LI-COR uses a worldwide network of distributors to sell and support its complete ...
By LI-COR
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LI-COR Offers New Tool for Mapping Soil CO2 Concentrations and Fluxes
Real-time mapping of soil CO2 concentrations and fluxes are recorded by an integrated CO2 mapping tool with GPS unit introduced by LI-COR Biosciences. The 8100-405 CO2 Mapping Kit allows researchers to take ground level CO2 concentration measurements and correlate spatial data with soil CO2 flux observations. As the need for monitoring greenhouse gases continues to ...
By LI-COR
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LI-COR Presents Landfill Methane Emission Data at Global Waste Management Symposium
Measuring greenhouse gas emissions at landfills using continuous monitoring offers new insight in estimating total annual emissions. LI-COR Principal Scientist, Liukang Xu presented methane emission data collected from a landfill at Global Waste Management Symposium in Phoenix, AZ on October 1st, 2012 and discussed the advantages of continuous monitoring over traditional interval monitoring. In ...
By LI-COR
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LI-COR Releases New Eddy Covariance Processing Software
LI-COR Biosciences introduces EddyPro Express, an open source software package that computes fluxes of carbon dioxide, water vapor, methane, and energy using the Eddy Covariance method. EddyPro Express is designed to provide increased data standardization in the Eddy Covariance community by providing a tool that is both robust and straight forward. “Processing data using the eddy ...
By LI-COR
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LI-COR Analyzers Monitoring Carbon Dioxide Worldwide as Atmospheric Levels Reach 400 parts per million
On May 13, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) reported a preliminary daily average carbon dioxide (CO2) reading of 400.07 parts per million (ppm) at the Mauna Loa Observatory on the Big Island of Hawaii. On May 9, a reading over 400 ppm was reported at the site for the first time ever. But that reading (400.03 ppm) was later revised to 399.89 ppm. The first CO2 measurement ...
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