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Mineral dust cycle in the Multiscale Online Nonhydrostatic AtmospheRe CHemistry model (MONARCH) Version 2.0

Authors :
M. Klose
O. Jorba
M. Gonçalves Ageitos
J. Escribano
M. L. Dawson
V. Obiso
E. Di Tomaso
S. Basart
G. Montané Pinto
F. Macchia
P. Ginoux
J. Guerschman
C. Prigent
Y. Huang
J. F. Kok
R. L. Miller
C. Pérez García-Pando
Source :
Geoscientific Model Development, Vol 14, Pp 6403-6444 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Copernicus Publications, 2021.

Abstract

We present the dust module in the Multiscale Online Non-hydrostatic AtmospheRe CHemistry model (MONARCH) version 2.0, a chemical weather prediction system that can be used for regional and global modeling at a range of resolutions. The representations of dust processes in MONARCH were upgraded with a focus on dust emission (emission parameterizations, entrainment thresholds, considerations of soil moisture and surface cover), lower boundary conditions (roughness, potential dust sources), and dust–radiation interactions. MONARCH now allows modeling of global and regional mineral dust cycles using fundamentally different paradigms, ranging from strongly simplified to physics-based parameterizations. We present a detailed description of these updates along with four global benchmark simulations, which use conceptually different dust emission parameterizations, and we evaluate the simulations against observations of dust optical depth. We determine key dust parameters, such as global annual emission/deposition flux, dust loading, dust optical depth, mass-extinction efficiency, single-scattering albedo, and direct radiative effects. For dust-particle diameters up to 20 µm, the total annual dust emission and deposition fluxes obtained with our four experiments range between about 3500 and 6000 Tg, which largely depend upon differences in the emitted size distribution. Considering ellipsoidal particle shapes and dust refractive indices that account for size-resolved mineralogy, we estimate the global total (longwave and shortwave) dust direct radiative effect (DRE) at the surface to range between about −0.90 and −0.63 W m−2 and at the top of the atmosphere between −0.20 and −0.28 W m−2. Our evaluation demonstrates that MONARCH is able to reproduce key features of the spatiotemporal variability of the global dust cycle with important and insightful differences between the different configurations.

Subjects

Subjects :
Geology
QE1-996.5

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1991959X and 19919603
Volume :
14
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Geoscientific Model Development
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.94955ed603d14a50858b24bbafbc86f3
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-14-6403-2021