Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Feb 2022)

Aerosol radiative impact during the summer 2019 heatwave produced partly by an inter-continental Saharan dust outbreak – Part 2: Long-wave and net dust direct radiative effect

  • M. Sicard,
  • M. Sicard,
  • C. Córdoba-Jabonero,
  • M.-Á. López-Cayuela,
  • A. Ansmann,
  • A. Comerón,
  • M.-P. Zorzano,
  • M.-P. Zorzano,
  • A. Rodríguez-Gómez,
  • C. Muñoz-Porcar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-22-1921-2022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22
pp. 1921 – 1937

Abstract

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This paper is the companion paper of Córdoba-Jabonero et al. (2021). It deals with the estimation of the long-wave (LW) and net dust direct radiative effect (DRE) during the dust episode that occurred between 23 and 30 June 2019 and was paired with a mega-heatwave. The analysis is performed at two European sites where polarized micro-pulse lidars ran continuously to retrieve the vertical distribution of the dust optical properties: Barcelona, Spain, 23–30 June, and Leipzig, Germany, 29–30 June. The radiative effect is computed with the GAME (global atmospheric model) radiative transfer model separately for the fine- and coarse-mode dust. The instantaneous and daily radiative effect and radiative efficiency (DREff) are provided for the fine-mode, coarse-mode and total dust at the surface, top of the atmosphere (TOA) and in the atmosphere. The fine-mode daily LW DRE is low (< 6 % of the short-wave (SW) component), which makes the coarse-mode LW DRE the main modulator of the total net dust DRE. The coarse-mode LW DRE starts exceeding (in absolute values) the SW component in the middle of the episode, which produces positive coarse-mode net DRE at both the surface and TOA. Such an unusual tendency is attributed to increasing coarse-mode size and surface temperature throughout the episode. This has the effect of reducing the SW cooling in Barcelona up to the point of reaching total net positive dust DRE (+0.9 W m−2) on one occasion at the surface and quasi-neutral (−0.6 W m−2) at TOA. When adding the LW component, the total dust SW radiative efficiency is reduced by a factor of 1.6 at both surface (on average over the episode the total dust net DREff is −54.1 W m−2 τ−1) and TOA (−37.3 W m−2 τ−1). A sensitivity study performed on the surface temperature and the air temperature in the dust layer, both linked to the heatwave and upon which the LW DRE strongly depends, shows that the heatwave contributed to reducing the dust net cooling effect at the surface and that it had nearly no effect at TOA. Its subsequent effect was thus to reduce the heating of the atmosphere produced by the dust particles.