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Where Dust Comes from: Global Assessment of Dust Source Attributions with AeroCom ModelsThe source of dust in the global atmosphere is an important factor to better understand the role of dust aerosols in the climate system. However, it is a difficult task to attribute the airborne dust over the remote land and ocean regions to their origins since dust from various sources are mixed during long-range transport. Recently, a multi-model experiment, namely the AeroCom-III Dust Source Attribution (DUSA), has been conducted to estimate the relative contribution of dust in various locations from different sources with tagged simulations from seven participating global models. The BASE run and a series of runs with nine tagged regions were made to estimate the contribution of dust emitted in East- and West-Africa, Middle East, Central- and East-Asia, North America, the Southern Hemisphere, and the prominent dust hot spots of the Bodélé and Taklimakan Deserts. The models generally agree in large scale mean dust distributions, however models show large diversity in dust source attribution. The inter-model differences are significant with the global model dust diversity in 30%–50%, but the differences in regional and seasonal scales are even larger. The multi-model analysis estimates that North Africa contributes 60% of global atmospheric dust loading, followed by Middle East and Central Asia sources (24%). Southern hemispheric sources account for 10% of global dust loading, however it contributes more than 70% of dust over the Southern Hemisphere. The study provides quantitative estimates of the impact of dust emitted from different source regions on the globe and various receptor regions including remote land, ocean, and the polar regions synthesized from the seven models.
Document ID
20240010844
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Dongchul Kim ORCID
(University of Maryland, Baltimore County Baltimore, Maryland, United States)
Mian Chin ORCID
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, United States)
Greg Schuster
(Langley Research Center Hampton, United States)
Hongbin Yu
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, United States)
Toshihiko Takemura ORCID
(Kyushu University Fukuoka, Japan)
Paolo Tuccella ORCID
(University of L’Aquila)
Paul Ginoux ORCID
(NOAA Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Princeton, United States)
Xiaohong Liu ORCID
(Texas A&M University College Station, United States)
Yang Shi ORCID
(Texas A&M University College Station, United States)
Hitoshi Matsui ORCID
(Nagoya University Nagoya, Japan)
Konstas Tsigaridis ORCID
(Columbia University New York, United States)
Susanne E Bauer ORCID
(Columbia University New York, United States)
Jasper F Kok ORCID
(University of California, Los Angeles Los Angeles, United States)
Michael Schulz ORCID
(Norwegian Meteorological Institute Oslo, Norway)
Date Acquired
August 21, 2024
Publication Date
August 17, 2024
Publication Information
Publication: Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Publisher: American Geophysical Union
Volume: 129
Issue: 16
Issue Publication Date: August 17, 2024
ISSN: 2169-897X
e-ISSN: 2169-8996
Subject Category
Geosciences (General)
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: 20-MAP20-0065
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC22M0001
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NM0018D0004P00002
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC24M0002
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Use by or on behalf of the US Gov. Permitted.
Technical Review
NASA Peer Committee
Keywords
Dust source attribution, Aerosol, Model
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