DocumentCode
2853312
Title
Potential for Dust Storm Detection Through Aerosol Radiative Forcing Related to Atmospheric Parameters
Author
El-Askary, Hesham ; Kafatos, Menas
Author_Institution
Dept. of Environ. Studies Fac. of Sci., Alexandria Univ., Alexandria
fYear
2006
fDate
July 31 2006-Aug. 4 2006
Firstpage
620
Lastpage
623
Abstract
The implications of climatic effects due to aerosols with a large variability like mineral dust serve as indicators of dust events and are examined. Airborne mineral dust can influence the climate by altering the radiative properties of the atmosphere. For instance, aerosols in the form of dust particles reflect the incoming solar radiation to space, thereby reducing the amount of radiation available to the ground. This is known as ´direct´ radiative forcing of aerosols. Aerosols also serve as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) and change the cloud albedo and microphysical properties of clouds, known as ´indirect´ radiative forcing of aerosols. Direct and indirect radiative forcing by mineral dust are observed over a desert case study in China as well as a highly vegetated case study over Nile Delta, Egypt, using boundary layer dispersion (BLD), albedo, sensible heat flux (SHF), latent heat flux (LHF) and out going long wave radiation (OLR) parameters. During the presence of the dust event, shortwave fluxes largely decrease accompanied by an abrupt increase in the down-welling long wave fluxes resulting in surface forcing. This leads to absorption of the shortwave and long wave radiations resulting in a positive forcing in the top of the atmosphere. In this research we are focusing on the radiative impacts of the dust over some meteorological parameters.
Keywords
aerosols; atmospheric boundary layer; atmospheric radiation; climatology; clouds; dust; minerals; storms; sunlight; vegetation; China; Egypt; Nile Delta; aerosol radiative forcing; airborne mineral dust; albedo; atmosphere radiative properties; boundary layer dispersion; climatic effects; cloud albedo change; cloud condensation nuclei; clouds microphysical properties; desert case study; dust events; dust storm detection; indirect radiative forcing; latent heat flux; meteorological parameters; outgoing long wave radiation; sensible heat flux; solar radiation; vegetated case study; Aerosols; Atmosphere; Clouds; Discrete event simulation; Minerals; Optical sensors; Optical surface waves; Radiation monitoring; Solar radiation; Storms;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 2006. IGARSS 2006. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Denver, CO
Print_ISBN
0-7803-9510-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IGARSS.2006.163
Filename
4241310
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