Abstract

<strong class="journal-contentHeaderColor">Abstract.</strong> During austral winter, a compact low cloud deck over the South Atlantic contrasts with clear sky over southern Africa, where forest fires triggered by dry conditions emit large amounts of biomass burning aerosols (BBAs) in the free troposphere. Most of the BBA burden crosses the South Atlantic embedded in the tropical easterly flow. However, midlatitude synoptic disturbances can deflect part of the aerosol from the main transport path towards southern extratropics. In this study, the first objective classification of the synoptic variability controlling the spatial distribution of BBA in southern Africa and the South Atlantic during austral winter (August to October) is presented. By analysing atmospheric circulation data from reanalysis products, a six-class weather regime (WR) classification of the region is constructed. The classification reveals that the synoptic variability is composed of four WRs, representing disturbances travelling at midlatitudes, and two WRs accounting for pressure anomalies in the South Atlantic. The WR classification is then successfully used to characterise the aerosol spatial distribution in the region in the period 2003–2017, in both reanalysis products and station data. Results show that the BBA transport towards southern extratropics is controlled by weather regimes associated with midlatitude synoptic disturbances. In particular, depending on the relative position of the pressure anomalies along the midlatitude westerly flow, the BBA transport is deflected from the main tropical route towards southern Africa or the South Atlantic. Moreover, the WRs accounting for midlatitude disturbances show organised transition sequences, which allow one to illustrate the evolution of the BBA northerly transport across the region in the context of a wave pattern. The skill in characterising the BBA transport shown by the WR classification indicates the potential for using it as a diagnostic/predictive tool for the aerosol dynamics, which is a key component for the full understanding and modelling of the complex radiation–aerosol–cloud interactions controlling the atmospheric radiative budget in the region.

Highlights

  • Natural and anthropogenic tropospheric aerosols are fundamental ingredients of the climate system

  • This study focuses on the six-class partition, i.e. the classification with the lowest significant number of weather regime (WR), which leads to physically coherent atmospheric patterns describing the main features of the synoptic variability

  • Massive quantities of biomass burning aerosols (BBAs) are emitted from tropical southern Africa and are driven westward over the South Atlantic by the southern African easterly jet (Adebiyi and Zuidema, 2016), while the anticyclonic gyre associated with the continental high recirculates the BBA towards South Africa along the Namibian coast

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Summary

Introduction

Natural and anthropogenic tropospheric aerosols are fundamental ingredients of the climate system. The scope of this paper is to fill the gaps in the understanding of atmospheric and aerosol dynamics during austral winter in the southern Africa and South Atlantic sector, by providing a characterisation of the synoptic variability of the atmospheric circulation and determining the circulation patterns controlling the transport of BBA from the tropics to the extratropics. To this aim, an objective weather regime (WR) classification of the winter atmospheric circulation in the southern Africa and South Atlantic sector is presented for the first time and used to characterise the BBA transport in the region.

Reanalysis and gridded observations
In situ aerosol observations
Weather regime classification
Aerosol synoptic characterisation
Synoptic characterisation of the regional atmospheric variability
Synoptic characterisation of reanalysis aerosol optical depth
Synoptic characterisation of aerosol optical depth in situ observations
Interannual variability
Conclusions
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