Publications

Chang, CH; Hosseinpour, F (2024). Relationships between Aerosols and Marine Clouds during the Godzilla Dust Storm: Perspective of Satellite and Reanalysis Products. ATMOSPHERE, 15(1), 13.

Abstract
In June 2020, a record-breaking Saharan dust storm, known as the Godzilla extreme event, caused significant dust transport from the Sahara Desert across the Atlantic Ocean to the United States. Based on satellite observations, the magnitude of aerosol optical depth (AOD) has consistently remained highest over the Atlantic Ocean for the past 18 years. This study uses satellite observations (including MODIS and CALIOP) and MERRA-2 reanalysis products to investigate the relationships between dust and marine clouds. During this extreme event, the concentration of AOD exhibits a synchronous anomaly with the cloud fraction (CF). Principal components analysis (PCA) results show that the enhanced temperature and specific humidity near the surface contribute the most to cloud development over the tropical Atlantic Ocean. Despite the reduced sensitivity of CF to aerosols, the semi-direct effect of dust can still play a crucial role during this extreme dust storm. We found that the presence of absorbing aerosols above the cloud layers warms the air, accompanied by an enhancement of surface moisture, thereby benefiting low-level cloud coverage.

DOI:
2073-4433

ISSN:
10.3390/atmos15010013