The Climatological Effect of Perturbations in Atmospheric Burden and Optical Properties of Saharan Dust

Mineral dust aerosols are a diverse set of atmospheric constituents which provide some of the largest natural direct radiative forcing and have the propensity to affect several human-relevant issues. This dissertation investigates the regional and global climatic response to aerosol radiative forcin...

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Main Author: Strong, Jeffrey Davin O'Neill
Other Authors: Vecchi, Gabriel A, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences Department
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Princeton, NJ : Princeton University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp0100000249w
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author Strong, Jeffrey Davin O'Neill
author2 Vecchi, Gabriel A
Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences Department
author_facet Strong, Jeffrey Davin O'Neill
author_sort Strong, Jeffrey Davin O'Neill
collection DataSpace at Princeton University
description Mineral dust aerosols are a diverse set of atmospheric constituents which provide some of the largest natural direct radiative forcing and have the propensity to affect several human-relevant issues. This dissertation investigates the regional and global climatic response to aerosol radiative forcing from dust using simulations with a suite of fully coupled climate models. An idealized perturbation to global dust climatology, with changes in Saharan-born dust comparable to the observed changes between the 1960s and 1990s, and an ensemble of realistic dust optical properties are utilized to study the climatological effect of perturbations in atmospheric burden and optical regime of Saharan dust. Changes in dust atmospheric concentration lead to direct radiative responses from the top of the atmosphere (ToA) through to the surface along with regional hydrologic and thermodynamic responses, depending crucially on the amount of aerosol absorption versus scattering. There are large anomalies in the West African monsoon due to moist enthalpy changes throughout the atmospheric column over West Africa. In the tropical North Atlantic, there are significant responses in the upper ocean heat budget arising from the wind stress curl response to a shift in the Atlantic Intertropical Convergence Zone and associated mixed layer depth anomalies. Simultaneously, there are changes in tropical cyclone activity across the North Atlantic Ocean with the largest response occurring in the most absorbing and scattering optical regimes. There are also non-negligible anomalies in the North Pacific and Indian Oceans. A relationship between accumulated cyclone energy and ToA radiative flux anomalies is used to explain the North Atlantic anomalies while several known climate variations are theorized to explain the far-field response to the dust forcing. Changing the optical regime of dust alone is found to lead to radiative anomalies larger than simply adding dust. As dust becomes more scattering, there is a net global cooling focused in the Northern Hemisphere and a general equatorward shift of tropical precipitation and the mid-latitude atmospheric jets. This leads to a preferential negative phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation, a decrease in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, and associated changes to the global meridional heat transport.
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North Atlantic oscillation
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North Atlantic oscillation
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spelling ftprincetonuniv:oai:dataspace.princeton.edu:88435/dsp0100000249w 2025-01-16T23:34:47+00:00 The Climatological Effect of Perturbations in Atmospheric Burden and Optical Properties of Saharan Dust Strong, Jeffrey Davin O'Neill Vecchi, Gabriel A Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences Department 2016 http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp0100000249w en eng Princeton, NJ : Princeton University The Mudd Manuscript Library retains one bound copy of each dissertation. Search for these copies in the library's main catalog: catalog.princeton.edu http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp0100000249w Climate Dust Hurricanes Hydroclimate Sahara Tropics Atmospheric sciences Environmental science Meteorology Academic dissertations (Ph.D.) 2016 ftprincetonuniv 2022-04-10T20:59:02Z Mineral dust aerosols are a diverse set of atmospheric constituents which provide some of the largest natural direct radiative forcing and have the propensity to affect several human-relevant issues. This dissertation investigates the regional and global climatic response to aerosol radiative forcing from dust using simulations with a suite of fully coupled climate models. An idealized perturbation to global dust climatology, with changes in Saharan-born dust comparable to the observed changes between the 1960s and 1990s, and an ensemble of realistic dust optical properties are utilized to study the climatological effect of perturbations in atmospheric burden and optical regime of Saharan dust. Changes in dust atmospheric concentration lead to direct radiative responses from the top of the atmosphere (ToA) through to the surface along with regional hydrologic and thermodynamic responses, depending crucially on the amount of aerosol absorption versus scattering. There are large anomalies in the West African monsoon due to moist enthalpy changes throughout the atmospheric column over West Africa. In the tropical North Atlantic, there are significant responses in the upper ocean heat budget arising from the wind stress curl response to a shift in the Atlantic Intertropical Convergence Zone and associated mixed layer depth anomalies. Simultaneously, there are changes in tropical cyclone activity across the North Atlantic Ocean with the largest response occurring in the most absorbing and scattering optical regimes. There are also non-negligible anomalies in the North Pacific and Indian Oceans. A relationship between accumulated cyclone energy and ToA radiative flux anomalies is used to explain the North Atlantic anomalies while several known climate variations are theorized to explain the far-field response to the dust forcing. Changing the optical regime of dust alone is found to lead to radiative anomalies larger than simply adding dust. As dust becomes more scattering, there is a net global cooling focused in the Northern Hemisphere and a general equatorward shift of tropical precipitation and the mid-latitude atmospheric jets. This leads to a preferential negative phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation, a decrease in the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, and associated changes to the global meridional heat transport. Other/Unknown Material North Atlantic North Atlantic oscillation DataSpace at Princeton University Curl ENVELOPE(-63.071,-63.071,-70.797,-70.797) Indian Pacific
spellingShingle Climate
Dust
Hurricanes
Hydroclimate
Sahara
Tropics
Atmospheric sciences
Environmental science
Meteorology
Strong, Jeffrey Davin O'Neill
The Climatological Effect of Perturbations in Atmospheric Burden and Optical Properties of Saharan Dust
title The Climatological Effect of Perturbations in Atmospheric Burden and Optical Properties of Saharan Dust
title_full The Climatological Effect of Perturbations in Atmospheric Burden and Optical Properties of Saharan Dust
title_fullStr The Climatological Effect of Perturbations in Atmospheric Burden and Optical Properties of Saharan Dust
title_full_unstemmed The Climatological Effect of Perturbations in Atmospheric Burden and Optical Properties of Saharan Dust
title_short The Climatological Effect of Perturbations in Atmospheric Burden and Optical Properties of Saharan Dust
title_sort climatological effect of perturbations in atmospheric burden and optical properties of saharan dust
topic Climate
Dust
Hurricanes
Hydroclimate
Sahara
Tropics
Atmospheric sciences
Environmental science
Meteorology
topic_facet Climate
Dust
Hurricanes
Hydroclimate
Sahara
Tropics
Atmospheric sciences
Environmental science
Meteorology
url http://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp0100000249w