Tellus, Series B: Chemical and Physical Meteorology  open-access icon

Journal Title

  • Tellus, Series B: Chemical and Physical Meteorology

ISSN

  • P 0280-6509

Publisher

  • Co-Action Publishing

Listed on(Coverage)

JCR 1997-2010;2013-2015
SJR 1999-2019
CiteScore 2011-2019
SCI 2010-2017
SCIE 2010-2017
CC 2016-2017
SCOPUS 2017-2020
DOAJ 2017-2020

OA Info.

OA open-access icon

based on the information

  • 2017;2018;2019;2020;
APC 1440 USD - US Dollar
Keywords air chemistry, aerosol science, climatic cycles, cloud physics, polar atmosphere, satellite observations
Review Process Blind peer review
Journal info. pages
Licences CC BY-NC
Copyrights False
DOAJ Coverage
  • Added on Date : 2012-03-22T13:03:03Z
Subject(s) Science: Physics: Meteorology. Climatology

Active

  • Active

    based on the information

    • SCOPUS:2020-10

Country

  • SWEDEN

Aime & Scopes

  • Tellus B: Chemical and Physical Meteorology along with its sister journal Tellus A: Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography, are the international, peer-reviewed journals of the International Meteorological Institute in Stockholm, an independent non-for-profit body integrated into the Department of Meteorology at the Faculty of Sciences of Stockholm University, Sweden. Aiming to promote the exchange of knowledge about meteorology from across a range of scientific sub-disciplines, the two journals serve an international community of researchers, policy makers, managers, media and the general public. Original research papers comprise the mainstay of Tellus B. Review articles, brief research notes, and letters to the editor are also welcome. Special issues and conference proceedings are published from time to time. Tellus B accepts papers on all aspects of atmospheric chemical cycling related to Earth science processes including: air/surface exchange processes; long-range and global transport and dispersion; aerosol science; chemical reactions; cloud physics and chemistry related to – cloud radiative effects, physical/chemical transformation and wet removal; biogeochemical cycles of carbon and other atmospheric constituents important to climate, air quality and the environment.

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