- Problem #1 - The trajectory clustering tutorial assumed the release would be from Dayton, Ohio. The other tracer release point was Sudbury, Ontario (46.62N 80.78W). Would Sudbury have been a better selection for September?
- Hint - Retrieve traj_freq_control.txt, change the starting location to Sudbury, and then run the daily trajectories and determine the optimum number of clusters.
- Solution - clusplot.html. Does the three-cluster solution look any better?
- Problem #2 - Is the 600 m release height realistic?
- Hint - Rerun the calculation using a 10 m AGL release height.
- Solution - The result is not that different.
- Problem #3 - Repeat the 10 m AGL release but this time for October.
- Hint - The meteorological data file (RP198310.gbl) should already be in the CAPTEX directory. If not, download it through the ARL Data FTP / Archive menu.
- Solution - The result dramatically illustrates one of the benefits of clustering, showing four orthogonal trajectory clusters, naturally selected according to the flow patterns for that month. Cluster #4 presents the ideal case for sampling in the CAPTEX network, but only with a probability of 9%.
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