Dust Source Areas and Their Plume Extent Derived From Satellite Data Fields
Author(s)
AlNasser, Faisal; Chehbouni, Abdelghani; Entekhabi, Dara
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In this study, prominent dust source areas are identified along with their plume extent using high temporal frequency satellite observations. Hourly dust plume observations of the Dust Belt from geostationary‐orbit satellites are analyzed for the 2017‐12–2022‐11 period. To identify dust source areas and their extents, we back‐track plumes to their source, assessing source areas in terms of emission frequency, contribution, and plume extent patterns. This method advances over traditional source allocation techniques that rely on polar‐orbiting satellites based on a few daily passes and meteorological wind fields for backtracking. Our findings indicate that Boreal summer is the most intense season for most sources, except in the Southern Sahara, which experiences winterly winds. Our analysis also reveals significant contributions from regions within the Sahara that experience expansive but infrequent dust storms, highlighting the importance of considering both frequency and magnitude in understanding dust emissions.
Date issued
2024-08-23Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental EngineeringJournal
Geophysical Research Letters
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
Citation
AlNasser, F., Chehbouni, A., & Entekhabi, D. (2024). Dust source areas and their plume extent derived from satellite data fields. Geophysical Research Letters, 51, e2024GL110753.
Version: Final published version