Other
Scientific paper
Jun 2004
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2004eostr..85..241h&link_type=abstract
EOS Transactions, AGU, Volume 85, Issue 25, p. 241-244
Other
4
Atmospheric Composition And Structure: Aerosols And Particles (0345, 4801), Global Change: Climate Dynamics (3309)
Scientific paper
Carbonaceous aerosols are increasingly recognized as an important atmospheric constituent. These small atmospheric particles are predominately soot produced by incomplete combustion of fossil fuels, biofuels, and outdoor biomass that generally form through condensation of vaporized organic matter. However, biogenic emissions from trees, other vegetation, and animals are also sources of carbonaceous aerosols. Elemental carbon, in the form of graphite, is the main cause of the blackness of soot; it absorbs sunlight strongly and almost uniformly across the solar spectrum. However, the graphite seldom is pure carbon, instead involving varying proportions of other atoms. Furthermore, the carbonaceous aerosols include an enormous variety of organic compounds of carbon.
Bond Tami
Cairns Brian
Gaeggler Heinz
Hansen James
Liepert Beate
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