[{"@context":"http:\/\/schema.org\/","@type":"Dataset","identifier":"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.17043\/oden-ascos-2008-bubble-size-1","@id":"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.17043\/oden-ascos-2008-bubble-size-1","name":"Bubble sizes in the water measured during the high-Arctic ASCOS expedition 2008","description":"Upper ocean gas bubbles generate airborne droplets when they burst at the surface, either \"film droplets\", from remnants of the surface of a bubble, or \"jet droplets\", formed by a jet of liquid that shoots upward from the bottom of the bubble as its upper rim breaks the surface. When droplets evaporate, insoluble material from the upper ocean contained inside the droplets will remain airborne as aerosol particles. This is a well-known mechanism whereby, for example, breaking wind waves generate sea-salt aerosols. In the Arctic summer, with short fetch over open water and relatively low wind speeds, it is not obvious that bubbles will form. Hence, during ASCOS we deployed a system to measure number and size of bubbles in the upper water column.","url":"http:\/\/bolin.su.se\/data\/oden-ascos-2008-bubble-size-1","keywords":["Marine","Observations","ASCOS","Oceanography","High Arctic","Arctic boundary layer","Arctic clouds","Ocean","Bubble","Biogenic aerosols","Earth science > Atmosphere"],"creator":{"@type":"Person","name":"Sarah Norris"},"citation":"Tjernstr\u00f6m, M. et al. 2014. The Arctic Summer Cloud Ocean Study (ASCOS): overview and experimental design. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 14, 2823\u20132869. DOI:10.5194\/acp-14-2823-2014","isAccessibleForFree":true,"includedInDataCatalog":{"@type":"DataCatalog","name":"Bolin Centre for Climate Research, Stockholm University","identifier":"https:\/\/bolin.su.se\/data\/","url":"https:\/\/bolin.su.se\/data\/"},"distribution":{"@type":"DataDownload","encodingFormat":false,"contentUrl":"https:\/\/bolin.su.se\/data\/\/data\/ascos\/files\/Bubble.zip"},"size":false,"isBasedOn":"Tjernstr\u00f6m, M. et al. 2014. The Arctic Summer Cloud Ocean Study (ASCOS): overview and experimental design. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 14, 2823\u20132869. DOI:10.5194\/acp-14-2823-2014","temporalCoverage":"2008-08-13\/2008-08-13"}]