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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Mineral dust aerosols over the Sahara: Meteorological controls on emission and transport and implications for modeling

TLDR
The work in this article summarizes recent progress on monitoring and analyzing the dust distribution over the Sahara and discusses implications for numerical modeling, including better quantification of the relative importance of single processes and a more realistic representation of the effects of the smaller-scale meteorological features in dust models.
Abstract
Atmospheric mineral dust has recently become an important research field in Earth system science because of its impacts on radiation, clouds, atmospheric dynamics and chemistry, air quality, and biogeochemical cycles. Studying and modeling dust emission and transport over the world's largest source region, the Sahara, is particularly challenging because of the complex meteorology and a very sparse observational network. Recent advances in satellite retrievals together with ground- and aircraft-based field campaigns have fostered our understanding of the spatiotemporal variability of the dust aerosol and its atmospheric drivers. We now have a more complete picture of the key processes in the atmosphere associated with dust emission. These cover a range of scales from (1) synoptic scale cyclones in the northern sector of the Sahara, harmattan surges and African easterly waves, through (2) low-level jets and cold pools of mesoscale convective systems (particularly over the Sahel), to (3) microscale dust devils and dusty plumes, each with its own pronounced diurnal and seasonal characteristics. This paper summarizes recent progress on monitoring and analyzing the dust distribution over the Sahara and discusses implications for numerical modeling. Among the key challenges for the future are a better quantification of the relative importance of single processes and a more realistic representation of the effects of the smaller-scale meteorological features in dust models. In particular, moist convection has been recognized as a major limitation to our understanding because of the inability of satellites to observe dust under clouds and the difficulties of numerical models to capture convective organization.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Global Scale Attribution of Anthropogenic and Natural Dust Sources and their Emission Rates Based on MODIS Deep Blue Aerosol Products

TL;DR: In this article, a global-scale high-resolution (0.1°) mapping of sources based on Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) Deep Blue estimates of dust optical depth in conjunction with other data sets including land use is presented.
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Ice nucleation by particles immersed in supercooled cloud droplets

TL;DR: Aerosol species which have been identified in the past as potentially important ice nuclei are introduced and their ice-nucleating ability when immersed in a supercooled droplet is addressed and the importance of ice nucleation by different aerosol types is estimated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dryland climate change: Recent progress and challenges

TL;DR: In this paper, a review describes recent progress in dryland climate change research, showing that the long-term trend of the aridity index (AI) is mainly attributable to increased greenhouse gas emissions while anthropogenic aerosols exert small effects but alter its attributions.
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Characterizing the annual cycle of African dust transport to the Caribbean Basin and South America and its impact on the environment and air quality

TL;DR: In this article, the authors characterize the complete annual cycle of dust transport to the western Atlantic by linking the Barbados record to multi-year records of airborne particulate matter less than 10 µm diameter (PM10) measured in air quality programs at Cayenne (French Guiana) and Guadeloupe.
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The Present and Future of the West African Monsoon: A Process-Oriented Assessment of CMIP5 Simulations along the AMMA Transect

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the performance of the West African monsoon in the models of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP) phase 5, and found that the results showed little evolution in terms of both biases in present-day climate and climate projections, and that the outlook for precipitation in twenty-first-century coupled simulations exhibits opposite responses between the westernmost and eastern Sahel.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The MODIS Aerosol Algorithm, Products and Validation

TL;DR: In this article, the spectral optical thickness and effective radius of the aerosol over the ocean were validated by comparison with two years of Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental characterization of global sources of atmospheric soil dust identified with the nimbus 7 total ozone mapping spectrometer (toms) absorbing aerosol product

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used the Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) sensor on the Nimbus 7 satellite to map the global distribution of major atmospheric dust sources with the goal of identifying common environmental characteristics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global Iron Connections Between Desert Dust, Ocean Biogeochemistry, and Climate

TL;DR: The iron cycle, in which iron-containing soil dust is transported from land through the atmosphere to the oceans, affecting ocean biogeochemistry and hence having feedback effects on climate and dust production, is reviewed.
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