Measurements of Ice Nucleating Particles and Ice Residuals

It has been known that aerosol particles act as nuclei for ice formation for over a century and a half (see Dufour). Initial attempts to understand the nature of these ice nucleating particles were optical and electron microscope inspection of inclusions at the center of a crystal (see Isono; Kumai)...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ladino, Luis, Boose, Yvonne, Kanji, Zamin A., Kupiszewski, Piotr, Lance, Sara, Mertes, Stephan, Wex, Heike, Cziczo, Daniel James
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Article
Published: American Meteorological Society 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/118183
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1851-8740
Description
Summary:It has been known that aerosol particles act as nuclei for ice formation for over a century and a half (see Dufour). Initial attempts to understand the nature of these ice nucleating particles were optical and electron microscope inspection of inclusions at the center of a crystal (see Isono; Kumai). Only within the last few decades has instrumentation to extract ice crystals from clouds and analyze the residual material after sublimation of condensed-phase water been available (see Cziczo and Froyd). Techniques to ascertain the ice nucleating potential of atmospheric aerosols have only been in place for a similar amount of time (see DeMott et al.). In this chapter the history of measurements of ice nucleating particles, both in the field and complementary studies in the laboratory, are reviewed. Remaining uncertainties and artifacts associated with measurements are described and suggestions for future areas of improvement are made. Keywords: Clouds; Aerosols; Cloud microphysics; Cloud water/phase; Ice crystals