Radiative Effects of Increased Water Vapor Associated with Enhanced
Dustiness in the Saharan Air Layer
Abstract
The Saharan Air Layer (SAL) has been shown to be an elevated,
well-mixed, warm, dry, frequently dusty layer. The structure of the SAL
plays an important role in regional climate and in long-range dust
transport. A new analysis of aircraft observations shows that although
increased dustiness in the SAL is associated with drier conditions in
the lower-SAL as expected, dustiness is also associated with increased
moisture in the upper-SAL. We assess the radiative effects of the
observed dust and increased water vapor (WV) using a radiative transfer
model. The observed WV in the upper-SAL affects the top-of-atmosphere
(TOA) direct radiative effect (DRE), while lower-SAL WV affects the
surface DRE and column atmospheric heating. TOA DRE is negative for
dust-only, while including both the observed dust and WV reduces the
magnitude of the negative TOA DRE by 11%. The observed WV structure
increases the negative surface DRE from dust by 8% and increases
atmospheric heating by 17%. These effects are driven by longwave (LW)
radiation, whereby WV changes increase the positive TOA LW DRE by 30%,
decrease the surface LW DRE by 52% and change the sign of LW
atmospheric heating from negative to positive. The observed WV profile
leads to enhanced cooling in the moist upper-SAL and heating in the dry
lower-SAL under dustier conditions. Increased WV in the SAL is
consistent with other studies demonstrating a trend of increased WV over
the Sahara. This work demonstrates the importance of the upper-SAL WV
profile in determining the radiative effect dust.