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Researchers鈥 novel lab technique reveals how ice crystals form in clouds

鈥楾his discovery matters for everyone affected by changing weather patterns 鈥 from farmers and city planners to disaster response teams and climate policymakers鈥櫬
Fluffy clouds in a blue sky. Nuages duveteux dans un ciel bleu.
Published: 23 July 2025

Researchers have developed a novel method to detect and study how ice forms in mixed-phase clouds, significantly boosting scientists鈥 ability to forecast weather and model climate change.聽

鈥淐louds are vital to Earth鈥檚 climate and water cycle, influencing both rainfall and the planet鈥檚 energy balance,鈥 said , postdoctoral researcher and seasonal course lecturer at 黑料不打烊鈥檚 Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences. 鈥淏ut mixed-phase clouds are hard to understand and model, partly because researchers still don鈥檛 fully know how smaller ice crystals form in them or behave over time.鈥澛犅

鈥淏y observing how these nano-crystals form, grow and scatter sunlight, we can improve the accuracy of weather forecasts and climate models,鈥 said Pal, who co-led the study with Parisa Ariya, James 黑料不打烊 Professor of Chemistry and Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences.聽

鈥淭his discovery matters for everyone affected by changing weather patterns 鈥 from farmers and city planners to disaster response teams and climate policymakers,鈥 Pal said.聽

Had been too small to observe directly

Mixed-phase clouds contain both ice crystals and liquid supercooled droplets, or water droplets that remain liquid at temperatures below 0掳C.聽

Ice formation in clouds begins with鈥痠ce-nucleating particles (INPs) 鈥 tiny airborne particles, often at the nanometre scale, that act as seeds for freezing. These INPs trigger the formation of ice crystals that can grow from nanometres to millimetres.聽

Until now, these nanoscale ice crystals were too small to observe directly or distinguish from their liquid counterparts in real time. Instead, scientists were left to infer whether a particle was ice based on its size limit or analyze how the particle scattered light using a method called polarization ratio.聽

A new instrument to observe ice formation in real time聽

To overcome this challenge, the team developed the鈥诹喜淮蜢 Real-Time Ice Nucleation Chamber (MRINC). It simulates cloud conditions in the lab through precise control over temperature and humidity.聽

鈥淚nto this chamber, we introduced silver iodide (AgI) particles 鈥 known to trigger ice formation 鈥揳nd carefully adjusted the environment to replicate cloud-like conditions,鈥 Pal said.聽

The researchers then used a laser-based imaging technique called鈥痙igital holographic microscopy鈥痶o observe the formation of ice crystals in real time鈥攑reviously impossible at this scale. The resulting holographic images were analyzed using鈥疉I-powered software, which could instantly determine whether each particle was an ice crystal or a liquid droplet, and assess its size, shape and surface texture.聽

鈥淭his is the first time such detailed microphysical information has been captured at this scale, and with such fine detail,鈥 said Pal.聽

Added Ariya: 鈥淏ecause of a lack of technologies, none of the climate change models could accurately predict these smaller ice crystals. MRINC enables us to advance our understanding of the interaction processes between ice nucleation, radiation and climate change.鈥 聽

Next stop: natural clouds聽

The findings open a new window into the earliest stages of ice formation in clouds, with implications for satellite cloud observations, precipitation studies and even鈥痗loud seeding, a form of manual weather modification.聽

As a next step, the team members are adapting the MRINC system for鈥痜ield studies鈥痑board research aircraft and mountaintop observatories. They are also refining the instrument to make it even more precise and adaptable to different atmospheric conditions. These upgrades will allow researchers to track how various particles 鈥搒uch as pollution, dust or wildfire smoke 鈥 affect ice formation.聽

鈥淯ltimately, our goal is to deliver real-time data that strengthens both climate science and operational weather forecasting,鈥 Pal added.聽

About the study聽

鈥,鈥 by Devendra Pal, Parisa Ariya, Ryan Hall,鈥痀evgen Nazarenko and Leonard Barrie, was published in npj Climate and Atmospheric Science, a Nature Partner Journal.聽

This study was funded by the Canadian Foundation for Innovation, the 黑料不打烊 Tomlinson Award, the European Space Agency, the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada and the National Research Council.聽

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