In 102 characters: Researchers
measure supercooled water properties, fleshing out their understanding of rain and clouds.
Not exact matches
In winter the observers didn't use the anemometer, an instrument for
measuring wind speed, for fear it would be damaged by the
supercooled water droplets that froze to everything, leaving the observatory caked in windblown ice.
The researchers conducted 124 experiments of which 22 were deemed to have accurately
measured ice crystal growth rates in
supercooled water containing a glycoprotein impurity.
In one sentence: For first time, researchers
measure properties of
water at deeply
supercooled temperatures, fleshing out their understanding of rain and clouds.
Scientists
measured properties of
water at deeply
supercooled temperatures — which may help theorists flesh out their understanding of
water and help atmospheric scientists better understand rain and clouds.