Search results for "CCNC"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

2013

Abstract. As part of the CLACE-6 campaign we performed size-resolved CCN measurements for a~supersaturation range of S = 0.079 % to 0.66% at the high-alpine research station Jungfraujoch, Switzerland, in March~2007. The derived effective hygroscopicity parameter κ describing the influence of particle composition on CCN activity was on average 0.23–0.30 for Aitken (50–100 nm) and 0.32–0.43 for accumulation mode particles (100–200 nm). The campaign average value of κ = 0.3 is similar to the average value of κ for other continental locations. When air masses came from southeasterly directions crossing the Po Valley in Italy, particles were much more hygroscopic (κ ≈ 0.42) due to…

SupersaturationRange (particle radiation)010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesChemistryAnalytical chemistry010501 environmental sciences01 natural sciencesAerosolParticle-size distributionCloud condensation nucleiCCNCPrecipitationMass fraction0105 earth and related environmental sciencesAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions
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Size Matters More Than Chemistry for Cloud-Nucleating Ability of Aerosol Particles

2006

Size-resolved cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) spectra measured for various aerosol types at a non-urban site in Germany showed that CCN concentrations are mainly determined by the aerosol number size distribution. Distinct variations of CCN activation with particle chemical composition were observed but played a secondary role. When the temporal variation of chemical effects on CCN activation is neglected, variation in the size distribution alone explains 84 to 96% of the variation in CCN concentrations. Understanding that particles' ability to act as CCN is largely controlled by aerosol size rather than composition greatly facilitates the treatment of aerosol effects on cloud physics in re…

TroposphereMultidisciplinaryMeteorologyChemistryCloud physicsCloud condensation nucleiParticleCCNCKöhler theoryAtmospheric sciencescomplex mixturesChemical compositionAerosolScience
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