The Large-Scale Movement of Saharan Air Outbreaks over the Northern Equatorial Atlantic

Abstract
The intense and prolonged heating of air passing over the Sahara during the summer and early fall months forms a deep mixed layer which extends up to 15–20,000 ft during July, the warmest month. The dust-laden heated air emerges from West Africa as a series of large-scale anticyclonic eddies which move westward over the tropical Atlantic above the trade-wind moist layer, principally in the layer between 5000 and 15,000 ft (600–800 mb). Measurements made during BOMEX show that this Saharan air is characterized by high values of potential temperature, dust and radon-222 which confirm a desert origin. As the parcels of air within the layer proceed across the Atlantic the continuous fallout of particulate matter and the mixing at the base of the layer cause dust to be transferred to the lower levels where its concentration may become sufficiently great to produce dense haze at the surface over wide areas over the Atlantic and Caribbean in the latitude belt 10–25N. Nevertheless, measurements indicate ... Abstract The intense and prolonged heating of air passing over the Sahara during the summer and early fall months forms a deep mixed layer which extends up to 15–20,000 ft during July, the warmest month. The dust-laden heated air emerges from West Africa as a series of large-scale anticyclonic eddies which move westward over the tropical Atlantic above the trade-wind moist layer, principally in the layer between 5000 and 15,000 ft (600–800 mb). Measurements made during BOMEX show that this Saharan air is characterized by high values of potential temperature, dust and radon-222 which confirm a desert origin. As the parcels of air within the layer proceed across the Atlantic the continuous fallout of particulate matter and the mixing at the base of the layer cause dust to be transferred to the lower levels where its concentration may become sufficiently great to produce dense haze at the surface over wide areas over the Atlantic and Caribbean in the latitude belt 10–25N. Nevertheless, measurements indicate ...

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