39 results on '"Weinheimer, Andrew J."'
Search Results
2. Direct Constraints on Secondary HONO Production in Aged Wildfire Smoke From Airborne Measurements Over the Western US
3. An Inversion Framework for Optimizing Non‐Methane VOC Emissions Using Remote Sensing and Airborne Observations in Northeast Asia During the KORUS‐AQ Field Campaign
4. Evaluation of Secondary Organic Aerosol (SOA) Simulations for Seoul, Korea
5. Empirical Insights Into the Fate of Ammonia in Western U.S. Wildfire Smoke Plumes
6. Emissions of Reactive Nitrogen From Western U.S. Wildfires During Summer 2018
7. Evidence of Nighttime Production of Organic Nitrates During SEAC 4 RS, FRAPPÉ, and KORUS‐AQ
8. Impact of Aerosols From Urban and Shipping Emission Sources on Terrestrial Carbon Uptake and Evapotranspiration: A Case Study in East Asia
9. Comparison of Airborne Reactive Nitrogen Measurements During WINTER
10. Rates of Wintertime Atmospheric SO 2 Oxidation based on Aircraft Observations during Clear‐Sky Conditions over the Eastern United States
11. ClNO 2 Yields From Aircraft Measurements During the 2015 WINTER Campaign and Critical Evaluation of the Current Parameterization
12. Airborne Observations of Reactive Inorganic Chlorine and Bromine Species in the Exhaust of Coal‐Fired Power Plants
13. NOx Lifetime and NOy Partitioning During WINTER
14. Flight Deployment of a High-Resolution Time-of-Flight Chemical Ionization Mass Spectrometer: Observations of Reactive Halogen and Nitrogen Oxide Species
15. Estimator of Surface Ozone Using Formaldehyde and Carbon Monoxide Concentrations Over the Eastern United States in Summer
16. Stratospheric Injection of Brominated Very Short‐Lived Substances: Aircraft Observations in the Western Pacific and Representation in Global Models
17. Modeling NH 4 NO 3 Over the San Joaquin Valley During the 2013 DISCOVER‐AQ Campaign
18. Heterogeneous N 2 O 5 Uptake During Winter: Aircraft Measurements During the 2015 WINTER Campaign and Critical Evaluation of Current Parameterizations
19. Characterizing CO and NOySources and Relative Ambient Ratios in the Baltimore Area Using Ambient Measurements and Source Attribution Modeling
20. First Top‐Down Estimates of Anthropogenic NOxEmissions Using High‐Resolution Airborne Remote Sensing Observations
21. Wintertime Overnight NOx Removal in a Southeastern United States Coal‐fired Power Plant Plume: A Model for Understanding Winter NOx Processing and its Implications
22. Formaldehyde in the Tropical Western Pacific: Chemical Sources and Sinks, Convective Transport, and Representation in CAM‐Chem and the CCMI Models
23. Large biogenic contribution to boundary layer O3 -CO regression slope in summer
24. Evaluation of deep convective transport in storms from different convective regimes during the DC3 field campaign using WRF‐Chem with lightning data assimilation
25. Airborne measurements of BrO and the sum of HOBr and Br2over the Tropical West Pacific from 1 to 15 km during the CONvective TRansport of Active Species in the Tropics (CONTRAST) experiment
26. Arctic springtime observations of volatile organic compounds during the OASIS‐2009 campaign
27. An observationally constrained evaluation of the oxidative capacity in the tropical western Pacific troposphere
28. Frequency and impact of summertime stratospheric intrusions over Maryland during DISCOVER-AQ (2011): New evidence from NASA's GEOS-5 simulations
29. Large vertical gradient of reactive nitrogen oxides in the boundary layer: Modeling analysis of DISCOVER‐AQ 2011 observations
30. Convective transport of water vapor into the lower stratosphere observed during double-tropopause events
31. Transport in the subtropical lowermost stratosphere during the Cirrus Regional Study of Tropical Anvils and Cirrus Layers–Florida Area Cirrus Experiment
32. Ozone, aerosol, potential vorticity, and trace gas trends observed at high‐latitudes over North America from February to May 2000
33. Deep convection as a source of new particles in the midlatitude upper troposphere
34. A cautionary note on the use of some mass flow controllers
35. The spokes in Saturn's rings: A critical evaluation of possible electrical processes
36. Comment [on “Contributions of cloud and precipitation particles to the electrical conductivity and the relaxation time of the air in thunderstorms” by A. K. Kamra]
37. The electrostatic energy of a thunderstorm and its rate of change
38. The application of potential flow theory to the rotational dynamics of spheroids, disks, and cylinders
39. The electric field alignment of ice particles in thunderstorms
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