TCNJ

TCNJ Magazine - Spring 2016

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22 SPRING 2016 26 SPRING 2016 Ice twice A cubic ice crystal, only theorized about until now. (Following spread) Intricate hexagonal crystals magnified 110x. S EMs beam a stream of electrons at an object and send back exquisite detail. "These are ice crystal shapes we're seeing for the first time—they're not in the literature," says physics professor Nate Magee, one of several dozen researchers in the world who look at ice crystal shape and texture. "It's because people haven't had the technology to look at this level of detail." Why does this matter? Magee focuses on the crystals in cirrus clouds, once thought to be as smooth as a mirror, reflecting the sun's energy back skyward. But then the idea of an uneven surface gained traction—and TCNJ's SEM images now back that up. "The rough shape of the crystals will make the sunlight go up, down, and sideways," he says. For climate-warming calculations, "That's going to change the way cirrus clouds are represented in climate models."

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