Atmospheric radiative effects of an in situ measured Saharan dust plume and the role of large particles

This work will present aerosol size distributions measured in a Saharan dust plume between 0.9 and 12 km altitude during the ACE-2 campaign 1997. The distributions contain a significant fraction of large particles of diameters from 4 to 30 μm. Radiative transfer calculations have been performed u...

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Main Authors: S. Otto, M. de Reus, T. Trautmann, A. Thomas, M. Wendisch, S. Borrmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2007-09-01
Series:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Online Access:http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/7/4887/2007/acp-7-4887-2007.pdf
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spelling doaj-50ee4797efa745f7b5d4f27f2812c9cf2020-11-24T23:43:36ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242007-09-0171848874903Atmospheric radiative effects of an in situ measured Saharan dust plume and the role of large particlesS. OttoM. de ReusT. TrautmannA. ThomasM. WendischS. BorrmannThis work will present aerosol size distributions measured in a Saharan dust plume between 0.9 and 12 km altitude during the ACE-2 campaign 1997. The distributions contain a significant fraction of large particles of diameters from 4 to 30 μm. Radiative transfer calculations have been performed using these data as input. Shortwave, longwave as well as total atmospheric radiative effects (AREs) of the dust plume are investigated over ocean and desert within the scope of sensitivity studies considering varied input parameters like solar zenith angle, scaled total dust optical depth, tropospheric standard aerosol profiles and particle complex refractive index. The results indicate that the large particle fraction has a predominant impact on the optical properties of the dust. A single scattering albedo of ω<sub><I>o</I></sub>=0.75–0.96 at 550 nm was simulated in the entire dust column as well as 0.76 within the Saharan dust layer at ~4 km altitude indicating enhanced absorption. The measured dust leads to cooling over the ocean but warming over the desert due to differences in their spectral surface albedo and surface temperature. The large particles absorb strongly and they contribute at least 20% to the ARE in the dusty atmosphere. <br><br> From the measured size distributions modal parameters of a bimodal lognormal column volume size distribution were deduced, resulting in a coarse median diameter of ~9 μm and a column single scattering albedo of 0.78 at 550 nm. A sensitivity study demonstrates that variabilities in the modal parameters can cause completely different AREs and emphasises the warming effect of the large mineral dust particles. http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/7/4887/2007/acp-7-4887-2007.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author S. Otto
M. de Reus
T. Trautmann
A. Thomas
M. Wendisch
S. Borrmann
spellingShingle S. Otto
M. de Reus
T. Trautmann
A. Thomas
M. Wendisch
S. Borrmann
Atmospheric radiative effects of an in situ measured Saharan dust plume and the role of large particles
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
author_facet S. Otto
M. de Reus
T. Trautmann
A. Thomas
M. Wendisch
S. Borrmann
author_sort S. Otto
title Atmospheric radiative effects of an in situ measured Saharan dust plume and the role of large particles
title_short Atmospheric radiative effects of an in situ measured Saharan dust plume and the role of large particles
title_full Atmospheric radiative effects of an in situ measured Saharan dust plume and the role of large particles
title_fullStr Atmospheric radiative effects of an in situ measured Saharan dust plume and the role of large particles
title_full_unstemmed Atmospheric radiative effects of an in situ measured Saharan dust plume and the role of large particles
title_sort atmospheric radiative effects of an in situ measured saharan dust plume and the role of large particles
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
issn 1680-7316
1680-7324
publishDate 2007-09-01
description This work will present aerosol size distributions measured in a Saharan dust plume between 0.9 and 12 km altitude during the ACE-2 campaign 1997. The distributions contain a significant fraction of large particles of diameters from 4 to 30 μm. Radiative transfer calculations have been performed using these data as input. Shortwave, longwave as well as total atmospheric radiative effects (AREs) of the dust plume are investigated over ocean and desert within the scope of sensitivity studies considering varied input parameters like solar zenith angle, scaled total dust optical depth, tropospheric standard aerosol profiles and particle complex refractive index. The results indicate that the large particle fraction has a predominant impact on the optical properties of the dust. A single scattering albedo of ω<sub><I>o</I></sub>=0.75–0.96 at 550 nm was simulated in the entire dust column as well as 0.76 within the Saharan dust layer at ~4 km altitude indicating enhanced absorption. The measured dust leads to cooling over the ocean but warming over the desert due to differences in their spectral surface albedo and surface temperature. The large particles absorb strongly and they contribute at least 20% to the ARE in the dusty atmosphere. <br><br> From the measured size distributions modal parameters of a bimodal lognormal column volume size distribution were deduced, resulting in a coarse median diameter of ~9 μm and a column single scattering albedo of 0.78 at 550 nm. A sensitivity study demonstrates that variabilities in the modal parameters can cause completely different AREs and emphasises the warming effect of the large mineral dust particles.
url http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/7/4887/2007/acp-7-4887-2007.pdf
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