African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analyses |
|
|||
|
Contact Amma International ![]() Contact Webmaster |
TT7: Characterisation of Aerosols during the dry season and analysis of their radiative impactTT-leaders: Jim Haywood, Jacques Pelon, Karine Desboeufs, Paola Formenti, Ellie Highwood, Béatrice Marticorena Detailed information: TT7 document: Characterisation of Aerosols during the dry season and analysis of their radiative impact (latest update: 23.01.2006, pdf, 1.8 MB)
The importance of the radiative forcing of aerosols and potential impact on dynamics has been shown at different scales. The lack of inclusion of mineral dust aerosol has recently been highlighted as a major model deficiency in numerical weather prediction models. On the other hand, aerosols are now included in climate models to predict how they affect long-term climate changes acting directly on radiative budget or indirectly through the modification of cloud life cycle. To address these issues, the Met Office Unified model has been developed to include mineral dust generation, transport and deposition in both the global and CAM (crisis area model) versions. However interaction processes still need to be better understood and parameterised. Until now, dust and biomass aerosol properties and radiative impact have been characterized in regions where they have been studied independently. Dust uptake from the surface to the atmosphere has extensively been analysed and parameterisations have been developed for modelling. Source regions for dust and biomass burning particles as well as horizontal transport processes near sources can be identified by radiometry from satellite, but one of the main difficulties remains to precisely identify the vertical extension of the transported particles, which is critical for further dispersion and to the radiative impact due to their significant absorption. Far from the sources, dust or biomass burning aerosols can be frequently observed in elevated layers. In 1999, lidar observations from LITE were first used to analyse the dispersion of dust particles over the Atlantic ocean. Combination of in situ, passive and active remote sensing during the SHADE campaign have more recently allowed a better characterization of their radiative impact. Biomass burning aerosols have been extensively characterized during the SAFARI campaign. Although their radiative forcing is negative over low reflectance surfaces, the observations made during the SAFARI campaign have first evidenced a positive radiative forcing due to elevated biomass particle layers over water clouds. Dust and biomass burning aerosol particles have different microphysical and radiative properties (size, shape, absorption) and their mixing is leading to complex modifications. Mixing and, further on, aging, sedimentation and cloud processing occurring over land and ocean will then result in a variable forcing which needs to be better understood. This is the purpose of the AMMA SOP0 field experiment. The SOLAS
observational programme Dust Outflow and Deposition in the Ocean (DODO)
will be conducted in collaboration with AMMA and will extend observations of
dust outbreaks further west towards Cape Verde and the Atlantic Ocean. It will
be complemented by dust modelling, laboratory studies and remote sensing products,
to produce a quantitative climatology of dust deposition to the Atlantic Ocean,
including extensive analysis of iron content. In situ measurements of aerosol
chemical and microphysical properties will be made using the FAAM aircraft and
associated instrument suite during dust outflow events.
|
|||
| Home> Organisation> Committees> Taskteams> TT7> | ||||
| $haut_de_page | Visits: 686585 © 2005-2007 Medias-France | |||