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Analyzing Particles to Save the Planet – and for Profit

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Light-driven particle analysis – used in climate change studies, nanotechnology development, semiconductor manufacturing and more – is leading researchers to devise new photonic instruments.

Hank Hogan, Contributing Editor, [email protected]

Shane M. Murphy’s research begins with something small but could end with something big. Murphy, a scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in Boulder, Colo., is interested in airborne aerosols. Along with other researchers there, he wants to probe these particles in the air, determine their makeup and then tie that data into what satellites see from space. Doing so would reduce climate change unknowns. “The aerosol direct effect is one of the bigger uncertainties in climate change,” Murphy said. “It’s just the direct...Read full article

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    Published: March 2011
    aerosolsAir LiquideBalazs AnalyticalCaliforniacamerasCarl Zeiss USAclimate changeColoradoDaniel MurphyFeaturesHugh GottsIllinoisImagingindustriallaser mass spectrometryLeica MicrosystemsMario GislaoMicroscopyNew YorkNOAAOlympus Americaoptical microscopyparticle analysisparticlesphotoacousticsShane Murphysingle particle albedospectroscopyTom CalahanWayne Buttermore

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