Tracer ABCD (Water Overlay): Difference between revisions
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* Chemical emitters must be Buildings on the surface, not Buildings situated below the surface. | * Chemical emitters must be Buildings on the surface, not Buildings situated below the surface. | ||
* Chemical emitters' | * Chemical emitters' attributes do not take the form of function values, and thus must be added manually<!--[[Buildings#Adding_attributes]]--> or as part of [[Geo_Data_Wizard|loading in geodata]]. | ||
* Chemicals have generic definitions, in terms of name and magnitude, to allow for the modeling of arbitrary tracers. | * Chemicals have generic definitions, in terms of name and magnitude, to allow for the modeling of arbitrary tracers. | ||
|howtos= | |howtos= |
Revision as of 15:34, 26 January 2024
Icon | Attribute | Unit | Range | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
TRACER_A | x/m²/s | The amount of tracer A created per second per m² in this location. | ||
TRACER_B | x/m²/s | The amount of tracer B created per second per m² in this location. | ||
TRACER_C | x/m²/s | The amount of tracer C created per second per m² in this location. | ||
TRACER_D | x/m²/s | The amount of tracer D created per second per m² in this location. |
Buildings with a positive TRACER Attribute are known as chemical emitters. Buildings with a negatice TRACER Attribute are known as chemical decomposers.
Chemical emitters are Buildings which produce specific chemicals. The net amount of chemicals a single Building creates is spread out across it's surface. After the chemicals are created, any water flowing through the same location will carry a part of the chemicals with it.
Structures which are defined to create a negative amount of chemicals function as a scrubber or decomposer, removing the specified quantity of chemicals from the hydrological model.
In situations where water is absent, chemicals will not be moved between cells.
Notes
- Chemical emitters must be Buildings on the surface, not Buildings situated below the surface.
- Chemical emitters' attributes do not take the form of function values, and thus must be added manually or as part of loading in geodata.
- Chemicals have generic definitions, in terms of name and magnitude, to allow for the modeling of arbitrary tracers.