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ispartikler

Ispartikler, or ice particles, are small particles consisting primarily of ice. In atmospheric science they refer to microscopic solid water crystals suspended in the air or forming part of clouds. They range from a few micrometres to a few millimetres in size and can occur alone or as components of snow, sleet and hail.

Formation and growth. Ice particles form when water vapour deposits directly as ice (deposition) or when supercooled

Morphology and conditions. Ice crystals assume a variety of shapes, most commonly hexagonal forms such as plates

Occurrence and role. Ice particles are common in high-altitude cirrus clouds and in deep, cold clouds; they

Observation and study. They are observed with optical particle counters, imaging probes, lidar and radar, and

liquid
droplets
freeze
upon
contact
with
a
nucleus
(riming).
They
can
also
grow
by
aggregation,
where
multiple
crystals
collide
and
stick
together.
Growth
is
governed
by
temperature,
humidity,
and
the
presence
of
freezing
nuclei.
and
columns,
with
dendritic,
fern-like
branches
at
certain
temperatures.
The
exact
habit
depends
strongly
on
ambient
temperature
and
supersaturation.
play
a
key
role
in
Earth's
radiation
budget
by
scattering
and
absorbing
sunlight
and
infrared
radiation.
They
are
central
to
precipitation
processes:
riming,
aggregation
and
accretion
lead
to
snow,
graupel
or
hail.
In
addition
to
natural
clouds,
ice
particles
can
be
produced
in
laboratories
for
research.
collected
via
in
situ
sampling
on
aircraft
or
ground-based
cold
chambers.
Climate
models
incorporate
ice
microphysics
to
simulate
cloud
behavior
and
climate
feedbacks.