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The Asian Dust Events of April 1998

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The Asian Dust ... On April 15 and 19 1998, two unusually intense dust storms ... Yellow muddy rain was reported from Beijing on April 16-17. The April ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Asian Dust Events of April 1998


1
The Asian Dust Events of April 1998
  • R. B. Husar, D. M. Tratt, B. A. Schichtel, S. R.
    Falke, F. Li D. Jaffe, S. Gassó, T. Gill, N. S.
    Laulainen, F. Lu, M.C. Reheis, Y. Chun, D.
    Westphal, B. N. Holben, C. Gueymard, I. McKendry,
    N. Kuring, G. C. Feldman, C. McClain, R. J.
    Frouin, J. Merrill, D. DuBois, F. Vignola, T.
    Murayama, S. Nickovic, W. E. Wilson, K. Sassen,
    N. Sugimoto

Paper revised for the JGR special issue on
dust The full paper is found at June 28, 2000
2
Summary
  • On April 15 and 19 1998, two unusually intense
    dust storms were generated over the Gobi Desert
    by springtime cold weather systems.
  • The dust was detected and its evolution followed
    by its distinctly yellow color on SeaWiFS
    satellite images as well as through routine
    surface-based monitoring and serendipitous
    observations.
  • The April 19 dust cloud was transported across
    the Pacific Ocean within 5 days and partially
    subsided between British Columbia and California.
  • On April 29, the average excess Asian dust
    aerosol concentration over the West Coast was
    about 20-50 mg/m3 with peak values gt 100 µg/m3..
  • The dust volume mean diameter of was about 2-3
    mm, increased the surface albedo over the
    cloudless ocean and land by 10-20 but it
    significantly reduced the cloud reflectance,
    particularly near UV.
  • The Asian dust event was observed and interpreted
    by an ad-hoc international web-based virtual
    community of researchers.

3
Dust Pattern in the Gobi Desert and East Asia in
April 1998
  • Daily measurements of surface visibility, aerosol
    optical depth, TOMS data and SeaWiFS images for
    the Gobi desert, show that major dust storms
    occurred on April 15th and April 19th.
  • The April 19th storm had larger impact on the
    East Asia region.
  • Model simulations of dust production and the dust
    pattern correspond to the observations.

4
The April 15th Dust Storm Dissipation within
Asia
  • SeaWiFS reflectance and TOMS absorbing aerosol
    index data (green lines) for the April 15th dust
    event. .
  • Fast winds ( gt 20 m/s) over the Gobi desert
    generated individual dust plumes.
  • After about 500 km transport, the plumes merged
    into a dust cloud

After 100o km transport from Gobi to Shanghai,
the yellow dust cloud has retained considerable
spatial texture. The April 15th dust was ingested
and removed by a precipitating low pressure
system. Yellow muddy rain was reported from
Beijing on April 16-17.
5
The April 19th Dust Storm
  • SeaWiFS image of the April 19th dust storm. The
    surface wind speed is gt 15-20 m/s and surface
    visibility data indicate dust throughout
    Mongolia. The yellow wedge-shaped dust cloud has
    a clear front and is recorded in both the SeaWiFS
    and TOMS data. The dust cloud over the Yellow See
    is only present in the TOMS data

Size distribution data and inversions of optical
data show that the dust volume is in the 1-10 mm
size range with a peak at 2-3 mm
The dust layer increases the spectral reflectance
of soil, particularly at lgt0.6 mm.
6
April 20-21 Transport Across East Asia
  • On April 20 the dust cloud was stretched along
    the seaboard of East Asia
  • Dust layers over low level white clouds, turned
    the clouds yellow by reducing the blue (412 nm)
    reflectance up to a factor of two.

By April 21 the dust stretched 1000 km into the
Pacific. Over the dark ocean, the excess dust
reflectance was also yellow.
7
Trans-Pacific Dust Transport
Approximate location of the April 19th dust cloud
over the Pacific Ocean between April 21-25 based
on daily SeaWiFS, GOES 9/10 and TOMS data. Over
the Pacific Ocean, the dust cloud followed the
path of the springtime East-Asian aerosol plume
shown by the contours of optical thickness
derived from AVHRR data.
Throughout the Trans-Pacific transit, the dust
appeared as a yellow dye marking its own
position.
8
Lidar Dust Profiles Asian Dust over North America
  • Lidar profile at Salt Lake City, UT on April 24
    indicates a strongly scattering aerosol layer at
    7-8 km with depolarization delta-values up to
    18, indicating non-spherical dust particles.
  • Lidar backscatter profiles at, Pasadena, CA at
    the peak of the event (April 27) show a dust
    layer between 6 and 10 km.

9
Visual Appearance of the Dust
  • The most noticeable impact of the dust was the
    discoloration of the sky.
  • From April 25 onward, the normally blue sky
    appeared milky white throughout the non-urban
    West Coast
  • This effect is due to the redistribution of the
    direct solar radiation into diffuse skylight.
  • Solar radiation data for Eugene, OR on a clear
    and dusty day shows a loss of direct radiation
    and doubling of the midday diffuse radiation due
    to dust particle scattering and absorption.

10
Dust over the West Coast of North America
  • a. GOES 10 geostationary satellite image of the
    dust taken on the evening of April 27.
  • The dust cloud, marked by the brighter
    reflectance covers the entire northwestern US and
    adjacent portions of Canada.
  • A dust stream is also seen crossing the Rocky
    Mountains toward the east.

b. Contour map of the PM10 concentration on April
29, 1998. Note the coincidence of high PM10 and
satellite reflectance over Washington
c. Regional average daily PM10 concentration over
the West Coast. The sharp peak on April 27-30 is
due to the Asian dust.
11
Dust Map over the West Coast
The PM2.5 dust concentration data from the
IMPROVE speciated aerosol network show virtually
no dust on April 25th, high values over the West
Coast on April 29th and dust further inland on
May 2. Evidently, on April 25th the dust layer
seen by the sun photometers was still elevated
since the surface dust concentration was low.
12
Hourly PM 10 Concentration in California
Hourly concentration data at 12 PM10 stations
near San Francisco shows that the dust has
subsided to the surface between April 26 and May
1. Note the the strong diurnal cycle during the
April 26-May 1 dust event.
13
The April 98 Asian dust - A unique Event over N.
America.
  • The average PM2.5 dust concentration at three
    IMPROVE monitoring sites over the 1988-98 period
    was well below 1 mg/m3
  • On April 29, 1998 the sites show simultaneous
    sharp rise to 3-11 mg/m3.
  • Evidently, the April 1998 Asian dust event caused
    2-3 times higher dust concentrations then any
    other event during 1988-1998.

14
Conclusions - Recommendations
  • Currently available space-borne and surface
    aerosol monitoring allows the detection and
    following the evolution of global-scale aerosol
    events.
  • Additional activities may include (1) organizing
    the available data into a documented and shared
    resource base (2) global aerosol model validation
    and testing (3) evaluation of satellite aerosol
    retrievals.
  • The online data and explanations on the Asian
    dust have provided just-in-time science support
    to managers responsible for protecting public
    health.
  • The Asian Dust web-based virtual community has
    shown that ad-hoc collaboration is a practical
    way to share observations and to collectively
    generate the explanatory knowledge these major
    but unpredictable atmospheric events.
  • A more robust and focused infrastructure to
    supports such collaboration during extreme events
    would assure that
  • learning is not left to chance!
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