Difference between revisions of "FAQ AMS Glossary"

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Semi-refractory signals: chemical components of aerosol that are relatively less volatile, and only slowly vaporize in the AMS. Functionally, they are observed in both the the Closed and Open signals (time-scale for vaporization is slow). Examples include Pb (lead) and possibly NaCl
 
Semi-refractory signals: chemical components of aerosol that are relatively less volatile, and only slowly vaporize in the AMS. Functionally, they are observed in both the the Closed and Open signals (time-scale for vaporization is slow). Examples include Pb (lead) and possibly NaCl
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SQUIRREL:

Revision as of 14:59, 23 February 2010

AMS glossary (beta)

Important Notes

This glossary of terms typically used by the AMS community is a work in progress - so is by no means complete or comprehensive. For now, we'll keep it alphabetical, but this may be changed based on user feed-back. Please continue to add and edit!

Glossary

f_44: the fraction of the organic signal that is observed at m/z = 44

APES:

Non-refractory species: chemical components of aerosol that are volatilized in the AMS, and are observed in the "Difference spectrum"

PET:

PIKA:

Refractory species: chemical components of aerosol that are not volatile enough to vaporize in the AMS, and thus are never observed by the instrument. Examples include ...

Semi-refractory signals: chemical components of aerosol that are relatively less volatile, and only slowly vaporize in the AMS. Functionally, they are observed in both the the Closed and Open signals (time-scale for vaporization is slow). Examples include Pb (lead) and possibly NaCl

SQUIRREL: