the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Highly time-resolved chemical speciation and source apportionment of organic aerosol components in Delhi, India, using extractive electrospray ionization mass spectrometry
Varun Kumar
Stamatios Giannoukos
Sophie L. Haslett
Yandong Tong
Atinderpal Singh
Amelie Bertrand
Chuan Ping Lee
Dongyu S. Wang
Deepika Bhattu
Giulia Stefenelli
Jay S. Dave
Joseph V. Puthussery
Lu Qi
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Claudia Mohr
David M. Bell
Dilip Ganguly
Vishal Verma
Neeraj Rastogi
Urs Baltensperger
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Jay G. Slowik
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The processes that establish how mixed-phase closed-cell clouds transition to more open cellular structures are poorly known. First-of-its kind aircraft observations document such a transition in the presence of anomalously high aerosol concentrations over the Nordic Seas at cloud temperatures < -15 °C. The reduces the drop size, discouraging riming. Eventually, ice precipitation produces surface cold pools that drive the convective transition, despite strong counteracting surface fluxes.
The processes that establish how mixed-phase closed-cell clouds transition to more open cellular structures are poorly known. First-of-its kind aircraft observations document such a transition in the presence of anomalously high aerosol concentrations over the Nordic Seas at cloud temperatures < -15 °C. The reduces the drop size, discouraging riming. Eventually, ice precipitation produces surface cold pools that drive the convective transition, despite strong counteracting surface fluxes.