Maggie Yandell receives two graduate fellowships!!!

Maggie received both the 2009 National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship and the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship for her chemistry PhD research at UC-Berkeley.

Andy Ault receives 2009 DOE Global Change Education Program Graduate Research Environmental Fellowship

Andy's 2009 DOE Global Change Education Program Graduate Research Environmental Fellowship fellowship is for research with Professor Kim Prather and Dr. Rahul Zaveri (PNNL); His proposal title is: "Integration of field measurements of chemical, physical, and optical properties of single particles into a particle resolved climate model" (for modeling his PACDEX data)

Aircraft Aerosol Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometer Development and Characterization

A recently published paper in Analytical Chemistry describes our newest ATOFMS, modified to work in research aircraft. Besides being a smaller size and having a decreased power consumption, the A-ATOFMS also has an increase mass resolution and size transmission. For more details check out the article.

Professor Kim Prather's Interview on Australian Radio

She explains how fires produce soot particles, which enhance climate change and supress rain. Check out the audio interview on The Science Show on ABC National Radio.

Congrats to Maggie Yandell!

Maggie Yandell was among 21 undergraduate students that received the 2008 Dean's Undergraduate Awards for Excellence which recognizes undergraduate students who have demonstrated academic excellence and promise as researchers. Maggie has been in our lab for 4 years and is currently deciding which graduate program she will attend next year.

Field study to help determine how air pollution affects rain and snow

We are participating in a field study at Sugar Pine Dam to determine how particulate matter affects precipation in California. We have a nozzle ATOFMS, an ultrafine ATOFMS, a CCN counter, SMPS, APS, gas phase instruments, aethelometer, PILS/IC, and a metereological station collecting data for about 2 weeks. Project is being funded by the California Energy Comission.

Post-Rain Air Could be Hazardous

A few of us got interviewed for channel 10 news

http://www.10news.com/video/18727671/index.html

How does the chemistry of dust impact its ability to form clouds?

The article "Effect of chemical mixing state on the hygroscopicity and cloud nucleation properties of calcium mineral dust particles" was published January 28, 2009 in Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics Discussions. It was co-authored by our group and our collaborators at Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Colorado State University.

Professor Prather selected to serve on the Board of Atmospheric Science and Climate

Professor Prather has been selected to serve a 3 year term on the Board for Atmospheric Science and Climate (BASC). A unit of the National Academies, BASC is and charged to look ahead and identify issues of importance to the atmospheric science and climate communities.

Professor Prather recently spoke at the Dreyfus Symposium in New York City highlighting environmental research in the United States

Professor Prather was one of 8 invited speakers at Climate, Energy, and the Changing Environment: A Dreyfus Foundation Symposium on Environmental Chemistry Research, which was held in New York City on Friday, October 24, 2008. The symposium, co-hosted by the New York Academy of Sciences, provided a current view of some of the most exciting topics within the broad field of environmental chemistry.

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