Besides atmospheric sciences, his group’s work has contributed to the multidisciplinary areas of natural hazards, global environmental change, biogeosciences, hydrology and public health. His team’s measurements near mine tailing sites in Arizona have raised public awareness about metal(loid) contamination in local aerosol particles. His multidisciplinary contributions have been recognized by the AGU Atmospheric Sciences Ascent Award and the Office of Naval Research Young Investigator Award. Aside from leading major field missions, Armin has trained a new group of upcoming researchers. He has supervised 19 Ph.D. dissertations and is currently advising 12 Ph.D. students; his graduate and undergraduate students have been included in 111 papers. He has also mentored students from Philippine high schools, the Manila Observatory and other schools such as in Bermuda as part of NASA field missions.
— Xubin Zeng
University of Arizona
Tucson, Arizona
— Antonio J. Busalacchi
University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
Boulder, Colorado
Armin Sorooshian is uniformly cited as one of the most important scholars worldwide in the field of aerosol–water relationships. He is the author of 123 peer-reviewed journal publications (including 41 papers in AGU journals). Early in his career, he was instrumental in bringing the Particle-into-Liquid Sampler (PILS) into the sphere of aircraft studies. He developed the Differential Aerosol Sizing and Hygroscopicity Spectrometer Probe (DASH-SP), the first instrument capable of measuring size-resolved aerosol hygroscopicity with fast time resolution. He also developed a novel Counterflow Virtual Impactor (CVI) inlet for airborne platforms to preferentially sample and evaporate cloud droplets to yield residual particles. Armin’s airborne measurements with the PILS and CVI instruments advanced knowledge of how clouds redistribute particles and modify aerosol composition. He was instrumental in unraveling the processes involved in the production of secondary organic aerosol by aqueous droplet chemistry. His work with the DASH-SP was important in several Navy and NASA airborne missions to advance understanding of aerosol hygroscopic properties. As a postdoctoral fellow with Graham Feingold, Armin used a combination of models, satellite data, and in situ observations to study the precipitation susceptibility of clouds to aerosol perturbations. He has been a leader in airborne fieldwork, as demonstrated by his being a principal investigator with the Navy Twin Otter aircraft in 15 airborne field projects. Armin’s impact in coming years will continue to grow, as evidenced by his having been selected recently as the principal investigator of the Aerosol Cloud Meteorology Interactions over the Western Atlantic Experiment (ACTIVATE), a $30-million NASA Earth Venture Class suborbital mission directed toward understanding aerosol–cloud–meteorology interactions over the western North Atlantic Ocean that will be carried out off the U.S. East Coast during 2019–2023. Furthermore, Armin has trained an impressive group of upcoming researchers in chemical engineering, atmospheric sciences, and public health.
—John H. Seinfeld, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena