The three of us, Lee, James, and Young, have been fortunate enough to participate in research for the first time in our undergraduate careers, down at the SIO Hydraulics lab …
A New Beginning
As I made my way back to California from Washington, D.C., I wondered how the next chapter of my life would unfold. Although I had been a research intern for …
Contamination Conundrum
I am an incoming first year PhD student in the Prather research lab. My project for this summer isn’t currently tied to what is happening with the main wave channel …
A Timely CAICE Summer Experiment
Summers are always an incredibly exciting time for all of us in the NSF Center for Aerosol Impacts on Chemistry of the Environment (CAICE) at UC San Diego. Every June, …
Bubbles and Aerosol Particles in the Hydraulics Lab
The Hydraulics Lab at Scripps Institution of Oceanography is probably one of the best places on the Earth to study bubbles and aerosols. When I joined CAICE in 2014, my …
Updates Coming Soon!
Stay tuned for updates on what has been happening during our large scale experiments at the Hydraulics Lab this summer!
CAICE’s 2018 Large-Scale Summer Experiment Commences!
This summer CAICE researchers are undertaking a large scale experiment that marks the end of 5 years of CAICE studies focused on understanding how seawater chemistry influences the atmosphere and …
New CAICE Nature Paper on Bacteria and Viruses Ejected from the Ocean
A new CAICE Collaborative publication entitled “Taxon-Specific Aerosolization of Bacteria and Viruses in an Experimental Ocean-Atmosphere Mesocosm” was published on the May 22 issue of Nature Communications and explores the …
Allen’s CAICE Publication Included in 2017 Hot Articles Collection from Phys. Chem.
A recent CAICE paper from the Allen group, authored by Bethany Wellen Rudd (graduate researcher), Evan Lach (undergraduate researcher) and Heather Allen (Principal Investigator), was selected by the editors of …
DeMott Group About to Start Field Studies in Tasmania
CAICE Investigator Paul DeMott will be part of a team of atmospheric scientists that will be based in Hobart, Tasmania for six weeks to collect cloud, aerosol and precipitation data …