Kocha, C; Tulet, P; Lafore, JP; Flamant, C (2013). The importance of the diurnal cycle of Aerosol Optical Depth in West Africa. GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 40(4), 785-790.
Abstract
High resolution atmospheric simulations with the AROME model coupled with a dust module over West Africa for the whole of June 2006 were used to calculate aerosol optical thickness (AOT). Simulations showed a significant diurnal cycle of 0.2 in the dust AOT that could not be inferred from the MODIS Deep Blue retrievals due to their timings. Dust sources are mainly driven by the breakdown of the early morning low-level jet and by moist convection in the afternoon, leading to opposite diurnal cycles. Also, simulations show that cloud cover significantly prevents the observation of AOT. The under-sampling of the diurnal cycle by satellites plus the impact of cloud masks on the space-borne AOT retrievals induce an underestimation of 0.28 (similar to 40%) over the convective regions and an overestimation of 0.1 (17%) over morning source areas like Bodele. A combination of observations and high-resolution models could constrain bias and give a more realistic AOT climatology. Citation: Kocha, C., P. Tulet, J.-P. Lafore, and C. Flamant (2013), The importance of the diurnal cycle of Aerosol Optical Depth in West Africa, Geophys. Res. Lett., 40, 785-790, doi: 10.1002/grl.50143.
DOI:
ISSN:
0094-8276