The seasonal vertical distribution of the saharan air layer and its modulation by the wind

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Abstract

The Saharan Air Layer (SAL) influences large-scale environment from western Africa to eastern tropical Americas, by carrying large amounts of dust aerosols. However, the vertical distribution of the SAL is not well established due to a lack of systematic measurements away from the continents. This can be overcome by using the observations of the spaceborne lidar CALIOP onboard the satellite CALIPSO. By taking advantage of CALIOP's capability to distinguish dust aerosols from other types of aerosols through depolarization, the seasonal vertical distribution of the SAL is analyzed at 1 horizontal resolution over a period of 5 yr (June 2006-May 2011). This study shows that SAL can be identified all year round displaying a clear seasonal cycle. It occurs higher in altitude and more northern in latitude during summer than during winter, but with similar latitudinal extent near Africa for the four seasons. The south border of the SAL is determined by the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), which either prohibits dust layers from penetrating it or reduces significantly the number of dust layers seen within or south of it, as over the eastern tropical Atlantic. Spatially, near Africa, it is found between 5 S and 15 N in winter and 5-30 N in summer. Towards the Americas (50 W), SAL is observed between 5 S and 10 N in winter and 10-25 N in summer. During spring and fall, SAL is found between the position of winter and summer not only spatially but also vertically. In winter, SAL occurs in the altitude range 0-3 km off western Africa, decreasing to 0-2 km close to South America. During summer, SAL is found to be thicker and higher near Africa at 1-5 km, reducing to 0-2 km in the Gulf of Mexico, farther west than during the other seasons. SAL is confined to one layer, of which the mean altitude decreases with westward transport by 13 m deg-1 during winter and 28 m deg-1, after 30 W, during summer. Its mean geometrical thickness decreases by 25 m deg-1 in winter and 9 m deg-1 in summer. Spring and fall present similar characteristics for both mean altitude and geometrical thickness. Wind plays a major role not only for the transport of dust within the SAL but also by sculpting it. During winter, the trade winds transport SAL towards South America, while in spring and summer they bring dust-free maritime air masses mainly from the North Atlantic up to about 50 W below the SAL. The North Atlantic westerlies, with their southern border occurring between 15 and 30 N (depending on the season, the longitude and the altitude), prevent the SAL from developing further northward. In addition, their southward shift with altitude gives SAL its characteristic oval shape in the northern part. The effective dry deposition velocity of dust particles is estimated to be 0.07 cm s-1 in winter, 0.14 cm s-1 in spring, 0.2 cm s-1 in summer and 0.11 cm s-1 in fall. Finally, the African Easterly Jet (AEJ) is observed to collocate with the maximum dust load of the SAL, and this might promote the differential advection for SAL parts, especially during summer. © Author(s) 2013.

Figures

  • Fig. 1. An example of SAL as observed from CALIOP on 5 July 2007 at 3:49 UTC. Top: the latitude-altitude cross section of the attenuated backscatter coefficient at 532 µm (km−1sr−1). The brown features at about 1 km and the elevated ones at about 5◦, 15◦ and 22◦ N are clouds. The white lines mark the overlap (see text for details) and the triangles (magenta, black or brown) show the top and the base of dust layers as detected by CALIPSO. Bottom: the CALIPSO track, with the part of the cross section presented above highlighted in blue.
  • Fig. 2. Number of dust layers (desert dust and polluted dust) detected by CALIPSO above the Atlantic during 5-yr period June 2006 to May 2011 for the four seasons: winter (DJF – top left), spring (MAM – bottom left), summer (JJA – top right) and fall (SON – bottom right). The magenta lines are the 0.25 AOD isolines from MODIS for each season.
  • Fig. 3. Vertical distribution of the dust aerosols occurrence frequency above the Atlantic Ocean at five longitudes (10, 20, 30, 40 and 50◦ W) during winter (DJF – left) nd spring (MAM – rig t) seasons from 5 yr of CALIPSO observatio s. The abscissa is the l titude from 10◦ S to 40◦ N. The cyan line at 6.5 km of each cross section marks the ocean, while the color line above it, between 7 and 8 km, is the MODIS AOD at 550 nm. The colorbar of MODIS AOD is the same as that of the dust occurrence frequency.
  • Fig. 4. Same as Fig. 3 but for summer (JJA – left) and fall (SON – right) seasons.
  • Fig. 5. Same as Fig. 3 but only for summer (JJA) at the five longitudes: 50, 60, 70, 80 and 90◦ W. The cross section at 50◦ W is repeated in order to facilitate the inspection of SAL evolution.
  • Fig. 6. Vertical distribution of the dust aerosols occurrence frequency above the Atlantic Ocean (from top to bottom) during winter (DJF at 5◦ N), spring (MAM at 10◦ N), summer (JJA at 15◦ N) and fall (SON at 15◦ N). The abscissa is the longitude from 80 to 10◦ W. The cyan line at 6.5 km of each cross section marks the ocean, while the color line above it, between 7 and 8 km, is the MODIS AOD at 550 nm. The colorbar of MODIS AOD is the same as that of the dust occurrence frequency.
  • Fig. 7. Mean zonal evolution of SAL altitude (left) and geometrical thickness (right) based on CALIPSO data from Africa (−10◦ E) to the Americas (−90◦ E). Each point is an average over 10◦ in latitude (indicated in the legend) depicting the mainly position of SAL in every season. The dotted lines are the linear fits for every season (see text for details).
  • Fig. 8. Horizontal wind from ECMWF at three pressure levels (900 hPa – bottom; 700 hPa – middle; and 500 hPa – top) during winter (DJF – left) and spring (MAM – right) seasons averaged over the same period as for CALIPSO. The vectors indicate the direction, and the color the wind speed (ms−1). The magenta isolines of 0.25 and 0.5 depict the MODIS AOD at 550 nm.

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APA

Tsamalis, C., Chédin, A., Pelon, J., & Capelle, V. (2013). The seasonal vertical distribution of the saharan air layer and its modulation by the wind. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 13(22), 11235–11257. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-13-11235-2013

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