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Development of a thermal gradient cloud condensation nucleus spectrometerDroplet clouds are one of the most important factors controlling the albedo and hence the temperature of out planet. Anthropogenic aerosols, such as black carbon (BC) organic carbon (OC) and sulfate, have a strong influence on cloud albedo. IPCC (2001) has estimated the global mean forcing from aerosols to be potentially as large as that of green house gases but opposite in sign. However, the uncertainties associated with the indirect aerosol forcing preclude a quantitative estimate. An additional impact on the indirect aerosol forcing, not quantified by IPCC, arises from recently identified chemical factors, for examples, interactions of atmospheric soluble gases, slightly soluble solutes, and organic substance with aerosols, which may influence the formation of cloud droplets. Recent studies suggest that inclusion of chemical effects on aerosol droplets. We plan to conduct several critical laboratory experiments that will reduce the uncertainty associated with indirect radiative forcing due to chemical modification of sulfate and BC aerosols by ambient gases.
Document ID
20060043744
Acquisition Source
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Document Type
Conference Paper
External Source(s)
Authors
Leu, Ming-Taun
Friedl, R.
Date Acquired
August 23, 2013
Publication Date
September 4, 2004
Meeting Information
Meeting: 8th IGAC Conference on Atmospheric Chemistry
Location: Christchurch
Country: New Zealand
Start Date: September 4, 2004
End Date: September 9, 2004
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
organic carbon
black carbon
sulfate
cloud albedo
droplet clouds

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