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  1. Asmat, A., Jalal, K.A., Ahmad, N.
    MyJurnal
    High uncertainties in aerosol radiative forcing (ARF) arise from inaccurate estimation for aerosol optical depth (AOD) as an input parameter into Santa Barbara Discrete Ordinate Radiative Transfer (SBDART) model. Influence of AOD in ARF at the top of atmosphere (TOA) and surface over Kuching from 2011 until 2015 was investigated using Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). Multi plane regression technique was used to retrieve AOD from MODIS (AODMODIS) by using different statistics (mean and standard deviation (MODISµ±σ) and relative absolute error (MODISRAE) for accuracy assessment in spatial averaging and compared with Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET). The relationship between AODMODIS and AOD from AERONET (AODAERONET) showed R2 value for MODISµ±σ and MODISRAE is 0.906 and 0.932, respectively. AODMODIS over Kuching tends to underestimate AOD during low variations and overestimate AOD when aerosol loading is higher. The retrieval of AODMODIS was used as an input parameter into SBDART for ARF estimation and compared with ARF from AERONET. When using AODMODIS from MODISµ±σ, the ARF at TOA was between -5.95 Wm-2 and 0.89 Wm-2 and at the surface was from -389.7 Wm-2 and -31.4 Wm-2 while for MODISRAE, ARF value at the surface was from -392.3 Wm-2 and -27.3 Wm-2 while at TOA was between -5.89 Wm-2 and 0.98 Wm-2. Average ARF value within the atmosphere for both MODISµ±σ and MODISRAE were 151.6 Wm-2 and 130.4 Wm-2, respectively. There is a poor relationship between the SBDART and AERONET for MODISµ±σ, where R2 is 0.33, while strong relationship is observed for MODISRAE with R2 value at 0.724.
  2. Dada AC, Asmat A, Gires U, Heng LY, Deborah BO
    Glob J Health Sci, 2012 May;4(3):126-38.
    PMID: 22980239 DOI: 10.5539/gjhs.v4n3p126
    Despite the growing demand of tourism in Malaysia, there are no resolute efforts to develop beaches as tourist destinations. With no incentives to monitor public beaches or to use them in a sustainable manner, they might eventually degenerate in quality as a result of influx of pollutants. This calls for concerted action plans with a view to promoting their sustainable use. The success of such plans is inevitably anchored on the availability of robust quality monitoring schemes. Although significant efforts have been channelled to collation and public disclosure of bacteriological quality data of rivers, beach water monitoring appears left out. This partly explains the dearth of published information related to beach water quality data. As part of an on-going nation-wide surveillance study on the bacteriological quality of recreational beaches, this paper draws on a situation analysis with a view to proffering recommendations that could be adapted for ensuring better beach water quality in Malaysia.
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