A. C. Aiken
flowchart A[A. C. Aiken] AC["Associated Concepts (22)"] AW["Authored Works (9)"] CA["Linked Co-Authors (24)"] CI["Linked Collaborating Institutions (17)"] A== dcterms:relation ==>AC AW== author ==>A AW== author ==>CA AW== affil ==>CI click AC "#associated-concepts" click AW "#authored-works" click CA "#co-authors" click CI "#collaborating-institutions" NI["add incoming edge"] NO["add outgoing edge"] NI-- ? -->A A-- ? -->NO click NI "#add-incoming-edge" click NO "#add-outgoing-edge" style NI stroke-width:2px,stroke-dasharray: 5 5 style NO stroke-width:2px,stroke-dasharray: 5 5
- ORCiD
- https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5749-7626
- OpenAlex ID
- https://openalex.org/A5086269653 (API record)
Associated Concepts [?]
- Physics
- Geography
- Chemistry
- Meteorology
- Organic chemistry
- Environmental science
- Geology
- Aerosol
- Atmospheric sciences
- Biology
- Quantum mechanics
- Ecology
- Materials science
- Oceanography
- Engineering
- Thermodynamics
- Environmental chemistry
- Mathematics
- Composite material
- Optics
- Computer science
- Chromatography
Authored Works
sorted by decreasing year, and then by display-name
- Surveying the First Year of SAIL Data and Formulating Hypotheses for its Second Year
- Mixed Carbon Aerosol Properties in Houston, TX (TRACER-CAT): Role of chemistry in absorption, scattering, and humidification
- Laboratory and Ambient Comparison of Hygroscopicity and Optical Properties of Aerosols
- Impact of humidification on ambient aerosol optical properties; Field observations from TRACER-CAT in Houston, TX
- Humidity Effects on Mixed Carbon and Dust Aerosols in Houston Measured to Evaluate Radiative Forcing and Deep Convection Modules in Climate Models
- Exploring the Properties of Supermicron and Bioaerosol Events duringthe Surface Atmosphere Integrated Field Laboratory (SAIL) Campaign
- Wildland-Urban Interface (WUI) Airborne Toxic Emissions of Formaldehyde and Aerosols from Urban Fuels
- Characterization and Source Apportionment of Nonrefractory Submicron Aerosol Chemistry at the Southern Great Plains Observatory
- Ambient smoke from Western US wildfires demonstrates predictable light absorption enhancements
Linked Co-Authors
- Adam Varble
- Alan M. Rhoades
- Alejandro N. Flores
- C. D. Cappa
- D. Feldman
- David Gochis
- Erica R. Siirila‐Woodburn
- Ezra J. T. Levin
- James E. Lee
- James N. Smith
- Jessie M. Creamean
- Jiwen Fan
- John E. Shilling
- Kyle Gorkowski
- L. Ruby Leung
- M. S. Raleigh
- M. Skiles
- Manvendra K. Dubey
- Maria A. Zawadowicz
- Paul J. DeMott
- Qi Zhang
- T. B. Onasch
- William R. Boos
- Zexuan Xu
Linked Collaborating Institutions
- Aerodyne Research Inc., Massachusetts
- Argonne National Laboratory, Illinois
- Boise State University, Idaho
- Brookhaven National Laboratory, New York
- Colorado State University
- Desert Research Institute
- Harbin Institute of Technology, China
- Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, California
- Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico
- Michigan Technological University
- National Center for Atmospheric Research, Colorado
- National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Boulder
- Oregon State University, Corvallis
- Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
- University of California, Berkeley
- University of California, Davis
- University of Utah
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