Vertical distribution and radiative effects of mineral dust and biomass burning aerosol over West Africa during DABEX
Author(s) -
Johnson B. T.,
Heese B.,
McFarlane S. A.,
Chazette P.,
Jones A.,
Bellouin N.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2008jd009848
Subject(s) - aerosol , mineral dust , environmental science , atmospheric sciences , lidar , radiative forcing , radiative transfer , extinction (optical mineralogy) , biomass burning , shortwave , earth's energy budget , climatology , meteorology , remote sensing , radiation , geology , geography , mineralogy , physics , quantum mechanics
This paper presents measurements of the vertical distribution of aerosol extinction coefficient over West Africa during the Dust and Biomass‐burning Aerosol Experiment (DABEX)/African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analysis dry season Special Observing Period Zero (AMMA‐SOP0). In situ aircraft measurements from the UK FAAM aircraft have been compared with two ground‐based lidars (POLIS and ARM MPL) and an airborne lidar on an ultralight aircraft. In general, mineral dust was observed at low altitudes (up to 2 km), and a mixture of biomass burning aerosol and dust was observed at altitudes of 2–5 km. The study exposes difficulties associated with spatial and temporal variability when intercomparing aircraft and ground measurements. Averaging over many profiles provided a better means of assessing consistent errors and biases associated with in situ sampling instruments and retrievals of lidar ratios. Shortwave radiative transfer calculations and a 3‐year simulation with the HadGEM2‐A climate model show that the radiative effect of biomass burning aerosol was somewhat sensitive to the vertical distribution of aerosol. In particular, when the observed low‐level dust layer was included in the model, the absorption of solar radiation by the biomass burning aerosols increased by 10%. We conclude that this absorption enhancement was caused by the dust reflecting solar radiation up into the biomass burning aerosol layer. This result illustrates that the radiative forcing of anthropogenic absorbing aerosol can be sensitive to the presence of natural aerosol species.
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