J
Jack E. Dibb
Researcher at University of New Hampshire
Publications - 358
Citations - 20343
Jack E. Dibb is an academic researcher from University of New Hampshire. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aerosol & Snow. The author has an hindex of 75, co-authored 344 publications receiving 18399 citations. Previous affiliations of Jack E. Dibb include Georgia Institute of Technology & Langley Research Center.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Maximum Temperature Trends in the Himalaya and Its Vicinity: An Analysis Based on Temperature Records from Nepal for the Period 1971-94
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the maximum temperature data from 49 stations in Nepal for the period 1971-94 and revealed that the recent warming trends were preceded by similar widespread cooling trends.
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An overview of snow photochemistry: evidence, mechanisms and impacts
Amanda M. Grannas,Anna E. Jones,Jack E. Dibb,Markus Ammann,Cort Anastasio,H. J. Beine,Michael H. Bergin,Jan W. Bottenheim,C. S. Boxe,Glenn Carver,G. Chen,James H. Crawford,Florent Domine,Markus M. Frey,Markus M. Frey,Marcelo I. Guzman,Marcelo I. Guzman,Dwayne E. Heard,Detlev Helmig,Michael R. Hoffmann,Richard E. Honrath,L. G. Huey,Manuel A. Hutterli,Hans-Werner Jacobi,Petr Klán,Barry Lefer,J. C. McConnell,John M. C. Plane,Rolf Sander,Joel Savarino,Paul B. Shepson,William R. Simpson,John R. Sodeau,R. von Glasow,Rolf Weller,Eric W. Wolff,Tong Zhu +36 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the nature of snow at a fundamental, physical level; photochemical processes within snow and the caveats needed for comparison to atmospheric photochemistry; our current understanding of nitrogen, oxidant, halogen and organic photochemistry within snow; the current limitations faced by the field and implications for the future.
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Precipitation fluctuations in the Nepal Himalaya and its vicinity and relationship with some large scale climatological parameters.
TL;DR: In this paper, the all-Nepal and regional precipitation series showed significant variability on annual and decadal time scales, and a strong correlation with temperature over the Indian Ocean and southern India exists.
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High levels of nitryl chloride in the polluted subtropical marine boundary layer
Hans D. Osthoff,Hans D. Osthoff,Hans D. Osthoff,James M. Roberts,A. R. Ravishankara,A. R. Ravishankara,Eric J. Williams,Eric J. Williams,Brian M. Lerner,Brian M. Lerner,Roberto Sommariva,Roberto Sommariva,Timothy S. Bates,Derek J. Coffman,Patricia K. Quinn,Jack E. Dibb,Harald Stark,Harald Stark,James B. Burkholder,Ranajit K. Talukdar,Ranajit K. Talukdar,J. F. Meagher,Fred C. Fehsenfeld,Fred C. Fehsenfeld,Steven S. Brown +24 more
TL;DR: In this article, Nitryl chloride, an active halogen, can be produced through the night-time reaction of dinitrogen pentoxide with chloride-containing aerosol in the polluted marine boundary, and has been measured at levels that are sufficient to affect the photochemistry of oxidants off the southwestern US coast.
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The Arctic Research of the Composition of the Troposphere from Aircraft and Satellites (ARCTAS) mission: design, execution, and first results
Daniel J. Jacob,James H. Crawford,Hal Maring,Antony D. Clarke,Jack E. Dibb,Louisa K. Emmons,Richard Ferrare,Chris A. Hostetler,Philip B. Russell,Hanwant B. Singh,Anne M. Thompson,Glenn E. Shaw,E. McCauley,J. R. Pederson,Jenny A. Fisher +14 more
TL;DR: The NASA Arctic Research of the Composition of the Troposphere from Aircraft and Satellites (ARCTAS) mission was conducted in two 3-week deployments based in Alaska (April 2008) and western Canada (June-July 2008) as discussed by the authors.