Sources and Distributions of Secondary Aerosols over the Northeastern United States during the WINTER Aircraft Campaign.

Viral Shah1, Lyatt Jaegle2, Jessica Haskins3, Pedro Campuzano Jost4, Jason Clay Schroder5, Jose L Jimenez6, Amy Sullivan7, Rodney J Weber8, Jack E Dibb9, Jaime Ross Green10, Marc Nicholas Fiddler11, Solomon Bililign12, Felipe Lopez-Hilfiker13, Ben H. Lee14, Patrick R Veres15 and Joel A Thornton2, (1)Harvard University, Cambridge, United States, (2)University of Washington, Department of Atmospheric and Climate Science, Seattle, United States, (3)University of Washington Seattle, Atmospheric Sciences, Seattle, WA, UNITED STATES, (4)University of Colorado at Boulder, Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) and Department of Chemistry, Boulder, United States, (5)Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, Boulder, CO, United States, (6)University of Colorado at Boulder, Dept. of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Boulder, CO, United States, (7)Colorado State University, Department of Atmospheric Science, Fort Collins, United States, (8)Georgia Institute of Technology Main Campus, Atlanta, GA, United States, (9)University of New Hampshire Main Campus, Institute for the Study of Earth, Ocean, and Space, Durham, NH, United States, (10)North Carolina A & T State University, Applied Science and Technology, Greensboro, United States, (11)North Carolina A & T State University, NOAA-ISET Center, Greensboro, NC, United States, (12)North Carolina A & T State University, Physics, Greensboro, NC, United States, (13)Tofwerk, Thun, Switzerland, (14)University of Washington Seattle Campus, Department of Atmospheric Sciences, Seattle, United States, (15)NOAA Boulder, Boulder, United States