Investigation of radiative effects of the optically thick dust layer over the Indian tropical region

Optical and physical properties of aerosols derived from multi-satellite observations (MODIS-Aqua, OMI-Aura, MISR-Terra, CALIOP-CALIPSO) have been used to estimate radiative effects of the dust layer over southern India. The vertical distribution of aerosol radiative forcing and heating rates are...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S. K. Das, J.-P. Chen, M. Venkat Ratnam, A. Jayaraman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2013-04-01
Series:Annales Geophysicae
Online Access:https://www.ann-geophys.net/31/647/2013/angeo-31-647-2013.pdf
Description
Summary:Optical and physical properties of aerosols derived from multi-satellite observations (MODIS-Aqua, OMI-Aura, MISR-Terra, CALIOP-CALIPSO) have been used to estimate radiative effects of the dust layer over southern India. The vertical distribution of aerosol radiative forcing and heating rates are calculated with 100 m resolution in the lower atmosphere, using temperature and relative humidity data from balloon-borne radiosonde observations. The present study investigates the optically thick dust layer of optical thickness 0.18 &plusmn; 0.06 at an altitude of 2.5 &plusmn; 0.7 km over Gadanki, transported from the Thar Desert, producing radiative forcing and heating rate of 11.5 &plusmn; 3.3 W m<sup>−2</sup> and 0.6 &plusmn; 0.26 K day<sup>−1</sup>, respectively, with a forcing efficiency of 43 W m<sup>−2</sup> and an effective heating rate of 4 K day<sup>−1</sup> per unit dust optical depth. Presence of the dust layer increases radiative forcing by 60% and heating rate by 60 times at that altitude compared to non-dusty cloud-free days. Calculation shows that the radiative effects of the dust layer strongly depend on the boundary layer aerosol type and mass loading. An increase of 25% of heating by the dust layer is found over relatively cleaner regions than urban regions in southern India and further 15% of heating increases over the marine region. Such heating differences in free troposphere may have significant consequences in the atmospheric circulation and hydrological cycle over the tropical Indian region.
ISSN:0992-7689
1432-0576