CAICE
@CAICECCI
NSF Center for Aerosol Impacts on Chemistry of the Environment
ID:2884567299
http://caice.ucsd.edu 19-11-2014 19:16:53
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A 99-second overview of our CAICE research by Scripps Institution of Oceanography comms. So proud of our team that made this possible!! The plan is to get these results in climate and air quality models by working with Max Planck Institute for Chemie in a wonderful new collaboration!!
🎉 Dr. Prather, our esteemed co-director at The Airborne Institute, has been honored with the 2024 NAS Award in Chemical Sciences. This is a huge day for all of us! National Academy of Sciences UC San Diego U.S. National Science Foundation Kimberly Prather, Ph.D. #NASaward #airborne
Congratulations to NAE and #NASmember Kimberly A. Prather of UC San Diego, winner of the 2024 NAS Award in Chemical Sciences for her pioneering research on aerosols! Learn more about her discoveries: bit.ly/chemical-scien… #NASaward #chemistry
Extending a very warm welcome to the newest Phase 2 NSF Center for Chemical Innovation, The NSF Center for the Mechanical Control of Chemistry (CMCC)! Learn more about their awesome science here: chem.tamu.edu/cmcc/
U.S. National Science Foundation U.S. National Science Foundation_CMCC #NSFfunded
Our newest CAICE publication modeling how chemical complexity of SSA impacts climate-led by Abigail Dommer and Rommie Amaro
Revealing the Impacts of Chemical Complexity on Submicrometer Sea Spray Aerosol Morphology
pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/ac…
A study from Matthew Pendergraft, Kimberly Prather, Ph.D. UC San Diego & colleagues shows sea spray can transport sewage-contaminated waters inland, exposing those living kilometers from the beach.
Comments by Crystal Weagle Dalhousie University. Story by Krystal Vasquez, PhD
eos.org/articles/sprin…
ICYMI: Using samples collected from Imperial Beach & the Tijuana River, Scripps atmospheric chemist Kimberly Prather, Ph.D. and recent PhD grad Matthew Pendergraft confirmed that coastal water pollution transfers to the atmosphere in sea spray aerosol. Learn more. ⬇️
scripps.ucsd.edu/news/coastal-w…
A study led by Scripps scientists found sewage pollution spilling over the border from Tijuana into the San Diego region impacts more than swimmers. Kimberly Prather, Ph.D. caught up with Joshua Emerson Smith to share more about the study. Via Los Angeles Times. ⬇️
latimes.com/california/sto…