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Dive into the research topics where Gabriela Adler is active.

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Featured researches published by Gabriela Adler.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Alternative pathway for atmospheric particles growth

Maria Eugenia Monge; Thomas Rosenørn; O. Favez; Markus Müller; Gabriela Adler; Ali Abo Riziq; Yinon Rudich; Hartmut Herrmann; Christian George; Barbara D’Anna

Credible climate change predictions require reliable fundamental scientific knowledge of the underlying processes. Despite extensive observational data accumulated to date, atmospheric aerosols still pose key uncertainties in the understanding of Earth’s radiative balance due to direct interaction with radiation and because they modify clouds’ properties. Specifically, major gaps exist in the understanding of the physicochemical pathways that lead to aerosol growth in the atmosphere and to changes in their properties while in the atmosphere. Traditionally, the driving forces for particle growth are attributed to condensation of low vapor pressure species following atmospheric oxidation of volatile compounds by gaseous oxidants. The current study presents experimental evidence of an unaccounted-for new photoinduced pathway for particle growth. We show that heterogeneous reactions activated by light can lead to fast uptake of noncondensable Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) at the surface of particles when only traces of a photosensitizer are present in the seed aerosol. Under such conditions, size and mass increase; changes in the chemical composition of the aerosol are also observed upon exposure to volatile organic compounds such as terpenes and near-UV irradiation. Experimentally determined growth rate values match field observations, suggesting that this photochemical process can provide a new, unaccounted-for pathway for atmospheric particle growth and should be considered by models.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Formation of highly porous aerosol particles by atmospheric freeze-drying in ice clouds.

Gabriela Adler; Thomas Koop; Carynelisa Haspel; Ilya Taraniuk; Tamar Moise; Ilan Koren; Reuven H. Heiblum; Yinon Rudich

Significance Aerosols cycling through clouds affect particle morphological and chemical properties, thus modifying aerosol effects on cloud microphysics and climate. Previous studies have focused on aerosol processing in warm clouds via aqueous-phase reactions. Here we investigate the physical modifications of aerosols following processing within ice clouds using a unique laboratory setup that simulates ice cloud processes. The processed particles have a porous structure due to phase separation upon freezing, subsequent glass transition, and ice sublimation. Such modified aerosols can be better ice and cloud condensation nuclei and scatter less light. These changes have implications for aerosol–cloud interactions and optical properties of aerosols in the vicinity of clouds. The cycling of atmospheric aerosols through clouds can change their chemical and physical properties and thus modify how aerosols affect cloud microphysics and, subsequently, precipitation and climate. Current knowledge about aerosol processing by clouds is rather limited to chemical reactions within water droplets in warm low-altitude clouds. However, in cold high-altitude cirrus clouds and anvils of high convective clouds in the tropics and midlatitudes, humidified aerosols freeze to form ice, which upon exposure to subsaturation conditions with respect to ice can sublimate, leaving behind residual modified aerosols. This freeze-drying process can occur in various types of clouds. Here we simulate an atmospheric freeze-drying cycle of aerosols in laboratory experiments using proxies for atmospheric aerosols. We find that aerosols that contain organic material that undergo such a process can form highly porous aerosol particles with a larger diameter and a lower density than the initial homogeneous aerosol. We attribute this morphology change to phase separation upon freezing followed by a glass transition of the organic material that can preserve a porous structure after ice sublimation. A porous structure may explain the previously observed enhancement in ice nucleation efficiency of glassy organic particles. We find that highly porous aerosol particles scatter solar light less efficiently than nonporous aerosol particles. Using a combination of satellite and radiosonde data, we show that highly porous aerosol formation can readily occur in highly convective clouds, which are widespread in the tropics and midlatitudes. These observations may have implications for subsequent cloud formation cycles and aerosol albedo near cloud edges.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Optical extinction of highly porous aerosol following atmospheric freeze drying

Gabriela Adler; Carynelisa Haspel; Tamar Moise; Yinon Rudich

Porous glassy particles are a potentially significant but unexplored component of atmospheric aerosol that can form by aerosol processing through the ice phase of high convective clouds. The optical properties of porous glassy aerosols formed from a freeze-dry cycle simulating freezing and sublimation of ice particles were measured using a cavity ring down aerosol spectrometer (CRD-AS) at 532 nm and 355 nm wavelength. The measured extinction efficiency was significantly reduced for porous organic and mixed organic-ammonium sulfate particles as compared to the extinction efficiency of the homogeneous aerosol of the same composition prior to the freeze-drying process. A number of theoretical approaches for modeling the optical extinction of porous aerosols were explored. These include effective medium approximations, extended effective medium approximations, multilayer concentric sphere models, Rayleigh-Debye-Gans theory, and the discrete dipole approximation. Though such approaches are commonly used to describe porous particles in astrophysical and atmospheric contexts, in the current study, these approaches predicted an even lower extinction than the measured one. Rather, the best representation of the measured extinction was obtained with an effective refractive index retrieved from a fit to Mie scattering theory assuming spherical particles with a fixed void content. The single-scattering albedo of the porous glassy aerosols was derived using this effective refractive index and was found to be lower than that of the corresponding homogeneous aerosol, indicating stronger relative absorption at the wavelengths measured. The reduced extinction and increased absorption may be of significance in assessing direct, indirect, and semidirect forcing in regions where porous aerosols are expected to be prevalent.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

The concept of apparent polarizability for calculating the extinction of electromagnetic radiation by porous aerosol particles

Carynelisa Haspel; Gabriela Adler

In the current study, the electromagnetic properties of porous aerosol particles are calculated in two ways. In the first, a porous target input file is generated by carving out voids in an otherwise homogeneous particle, and the discrete dipole approximation (DDA) is used to compute the extinction efficiency of the particle assuming that the voids are near vacuum dielectrics and assuming random particle orientation. In the second, an effective medium approximation (EMA) style approach is employed in which an apparent polarizability of the voids is defined based on the well-known solution to the problem in classical electrostatics of a spherical cavity within a dielectric. It is found that for porous particles with smaller overall diameter with respect to the wavelength of incident radiation, describing the voids as near vacuum dielectrics within the DDA sufficiently reproduces measured values of extinction efficiency, whereas for porous particles with moderate to larger overall diameters with respect to the wavelength of the radiation, the apparent polarizability EMA approach better reproduces the measured values of extinction efficiency.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2010

Chemical, physical, and optical evolution of biomass burning aerosols: a case study

Gabriela Adler; J. M. Flores; A. Abo Riziq; S. Borrmann; Yinon Rudich


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014

Complex refractive indices in the near-ultraviolet spectral region of biogenic secondary organic aerosol aged with ammonia

J. M. Flores; Rebecca A. Washenfelder; Gabriela Adler; H-J Lee; Lior Segev; Julia Laskin; Alexander Laskin; Sergey A. Nizkorodov; Steven S. Brown; Yinon Rudich


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017

Investigating biomass burning aerosol morphology using a laser imaging nephelometer

Katherine M. Manfred; Rebecca A. Washenfelder; Nicholas L. Wagner; Gabriela Adler; Frank Erdesz; Caroline C. Womack; Kara D. Lamb; Joshua P. Schwarz; Alessandro Franchin; Vanessa Selimovic; Robert J. Yokelson; D. M. Murphy


Archive | 2009

Optical properties of aerosols with organic components using cavity ring down spectrometry

Yinon Rudich; Ali Abo Riziq; Carynelisa Erlick; Gabriela Adler; Miri Trainic; Naama Lang


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

The concept of apparent polarizability for calculating the extinction of electromagnetic radiation by porous aerosol particles: Apparent Void Polarizability for HPA

Carynelisa Haspel; Gabriela Adler


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Optical extinction of highly porous aerosol following atmospheric freeze drying: Extinction of highly porous aerosols

Gabriela Adler; Carynelisa Haspel; Tamar Moise; Yinon Rudich

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Yinon Rudich

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Carynelisa Haspel

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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Tamar Moise

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Carynelisa Erlick

Hebrew University of Jerusalem

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A. Abo Riziq

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Ilan Koren

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Ilya Taraniuk

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Lior Segev

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Miri Trainic

Weizmann Institute of Science

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