Classification of aerosol radiative properties during African desert dust intrusions over southeastern Spain by sector origins and cluster analysis
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2012-03-28Sponsorship
Andalusia Regional Government through projects P08-RNM-3568 and P10-RNM- 6299; Spanish Ministry of Science and Technology through projects CGL2008-01330-E/CLI (Spanish Lidar Network), CGL2010–18782, and CSD2007–00067Abstract
The main goal of this study is to analyze the dependence of columnar aerosol
optical and microphysical properties on source region and transport pathways during desert
dust intrusions over Granada (Spain) from January 2005 to December 2010. Columnar
aerosol properties have been derived from a non-spherical inversion code using the solar
extinction measurements and sky radiances in the principal plane. Two classification
methods of the African air masses ending at the study location were used by means of the
HYSPLIT back-trajectories analysis. The first one, based on desert dust origin sources,
discriminated the optical properties only for sector B (corresponding to western Sahara,
northwest Mauritania and southwest Algeria). The particles present marked absorbing
properties (low value of single scattering albedo at all wavelengths) during the desert dust
events when the air masses were transported from sector A (north Morocco, northwest
Algeria). This result may be related to the mixing of desert dust with anthropogenic
pollutants from North African industrial areas in addition to the mixing with local
anthropogenic aerosol and pollutants transported from European and Mediterranean areas.
The second classification method was based on a statistics technique called cluster
classification which allows grouping the air masses back trajectories with similar speed
and direction of the trajectory. This method showed slight differences in the optical
properties between the several transport pathways of air masses. High values of the aerosol
optical depth and low mean values of the Angström parameter were associated with
longer transport pathways over desert dust sources and slowly moving air masses. Both
classification methods showed that the fine mode was mixed with coarse mode, being
the fine mode fraction smaller than 55%.