Atmospheric Chemistry in Cold Environments: Faraday DiscussionCheck Access
About this book
Wintertime and cold region atmospheric chemistry have important impacts on health, geochemical cycles and climate. Central to discussions of these topics are aspects that make gas- and multiphase atmospheric science in cold environments unique and complex, including key components such as sea ice, snow and ice clouds. Processes that occur at low temperatures in the atmosphere and at the ocean–atmosphere interface, including multiphase processes, the formation and processing of aerosol, particle nucleation and growth, trace gas emissions and fluxes, aerosol and pollution transport and changes of sea ice and snow with time and space are key areas of research in this discussion. Recent results from field campaigns, laboratory experiments, atmospheric modelling and computational work, have all contributed to this investigation.
This volume brings together world-leading established and early-career scientists working in the disciplines of atmospheric science, physics, chemistry, sea-ice science, meteorology and oceanography, to discuss the latest research in this area.
In this volume, the topics covered include:
Multiphase chemistry in aerosol, ice/mixed-phase clouds, and snow
Role of trace gases in particle and ice nucleation and growth
Exchange processes through/in snow and sea-ice
Emissions of trace gases and aerosol and atmospheric mixing/transport
Atmospheric Chemistry in Cold Environments: Faraday Discussion, Royal Society of Chemistry, 2025.
Download citation file:
Print format
Spotlight
Advertisement
Advertisement