Saharan Dust Experiment (SHADE) are used to quantify the effect of a strong dust outbreak on radiance and brightness temperatures. The dust gives a distinct spectral signature in upwelling and downwelling terrestrial radiation when high spectral resolution data for a dusty day is compared to data from a clear day. A radiative transfer model is used together with a size distribution retrieved from Sun photometers and atmospheric profiles from dropsondes to simulate the radiance data and provide a constraint on the refractive indices of Saharan dust in the terrestrial part of the spectrum. The degree of agreement between observed and simulated brightness temperatures is dominated by the choice of refractive index, the mass loading, and the al...
International audienceThe Sahara desert is one of the principal worldwide sources of dust aerosol em...
Realistic size equivalence and shape of Saharan mineral dust particles are derived from in-situ part...
The definitive version can be found at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/ Copyright Royal Meteorologic...
[1] Aerosols are known to be important in determining Earth’s radiative balance. Dust aerosols are o...
This work will present aerosol size distributions measured in a Saharan dust plume between 0.9 and 1...
[1] The Oslo chemical transport model (Oslo CTM2) is driven by meteorological data to model mineral ...
Airborne measurements of upward solar spectral irradiances were performed during the second Saharan ...
Detailed measurements of radiation, atmospheric and aerosol properties were carried out in summer 20...
International audienceDetailed measurements of radiation, atmospheric and aerosol properties were ca...
The effect of mineral aerosol optical properties and vertical distribution on clear-sky, instantaneo...
New in-situ aircraft measurements of Saharan dust originating from Mali, Mauritania and Algeria take...
In May–June 2006, airborne and ground-based solar (0.3–2.2 μm) and thermal infrared (4–42 μm) radiat...
Measurements of downward irradiance at sea level in the area off Northwest Africa in February 2008 w...
The solar optical properties of Saharan mineral dust observed during the Saharan Mineral Dust Experi...
This PhD thesis is embedded into the DFG research project SAMUM, the Saharan Mineral Dust Experiment...
International audienceThe Sahara desert is one of the principal worldwide sources of dust aerosol em...
Realistic size equivalence and shape of Saharan mineral dust particles are derived from in-situ part...
The definitive version can be found at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/ Copyright Royal Meteorologic...
[1] Aerosols are known to be important in determining Earth’s radiative balance. Dust aerosols are o...
This work will present aerosol size distributions measured in a Saharan dust plume between 0.9 and 1...
[1] The Oslo chemical transport model (Oslo CTM2) is driven by meteorological data to model mineral ...
Airborne measurements of upward solar spectral irradiances were performed during the second Saharan ...
Detailed measurements of radiation, atmospheric and aerosol properties were carried out in summer 20...
International audienceDetailed measurements of radiation, atmospheric and aerosol properties were ca...
The effect of mineral aerosol optical properties and vertical distribution on clear-sky, instantaneo...
New in-situ aircraft measurements of Saharan dust originating from Mali, Mauritania and Algeria take...
In May–June 2006, airborne and ground-based solar (0.3–2.2 μm) and thermal infrared (4–42 μm) radiat...
Measurements of downward irradiance at sea level in the area off Northwest Africa in February 2008 w...
The solar optical properties of Saharan mineral dust observed during the Saharan Mineral Dust Experi...
This PhD thesis is embedded into the DFG research project SAMUM, the Saharan Mineral Dust Experiment...
International audienceThe Sahara desert is one of the principal worldwide sources of dust aerosol em...
Realistic size equivalence and shape of Saharan mineral dust particles are derived from in-situ part...
The definitive version can be found at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/ Copyright Royal Meteorologic...