Asian
desert dust could be warming Arctic sea surface, confusing satellites
— study
Satellites
misread the surface temperature, showing it to be colder than it
really is
A
dust storm in Beijing in March 2002 from the Gobi Desert. In around
25 per cent of dust storms in Asia, particles travel to the Arctic
and contribute to the warming of sea surface temperatures. (Reuters
)
CBC,
12
September, 2018
Large
amounts of dust from Asian deserts could be contributing to the
warming of Arctic sea surfaces, but satellites are misreading these
temperatures as being colder than they are.
That's
according to a recent
study
published in Scientific
Reports by
Ron Vincent, an associate professor in the department of physics and
space science at the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston,
Ont. He studies sea and water surface temperatures in the Arctic.
"I
don't think people think about the Arctic as being a particularly
dusty place, and I don't think it's well known just how much dust is
being transported to the Arctic," he said.
Approximately
6.5 million metric tons of dust are deposited north of 60 every year,
much of it coming from deserts in Asia, according to another
study cited in the paper.
Vincent
said he hopes to look at older satellite data to see if the amount of
dust has increased over time and if it's more widespread in the
Arctic. He also wants to look at the Antarctic.
Ron
Vincent says research has shown dust travels through the atmosphere
from the Gobi and Taklamakan deserts and deposits on ice, snow and
water in the Arctic in a matter of days. (CBC)
About
25 per cent of dust storms in Asia transport particles directly
to the Arctic — mainly from the Gobi and Taklamakan deserts.
Smaller contributions also come form the Sahara Desert in
North Africa.
The
dust travels through the atmosphere and deposits on ice, snow and
water in a matter of days, Vincent said.
He
saw the phenomenon while looking at satellite images of the Amundsen
Gulf and Great Bear Lake in the Northwest Territories taken between
2007 and 2017. He said surface temperatures were much colder than he
expected and he was "astounded" when he discovered a layer
of dust covering the surface.
"From
space, it has a signature of a desert on the water, which to me was
pretty remarkable," he said. "I hadn't seen that, at least
in the Eastern Arctic with the studies I've done there."
Satellites
misread the surface temperature, Vincent said, because dust doesn't
emit energy as efficiently as water or ice surfaces. Therefore,
satellites report the temperature as being colder than it
actually is.
But
he said when dust is deposited on ice and water it actually causes
warming by reducing the reflectivity of the surface. This means it
absorbs the energy from the sun's rays rather than reflecting it back
into space.
The
Amundsen Gulf region is shown using infrared wavelengths to
illustrate the dusty area. (Submitted by Ron Vincent)
Vincent
said that while dust storms are naturally occurring, human
activities are still a big contributor to climate change.
"With
global warming, we're seeing more and more drylands, and we're seeing
more dust storms occurring and more violent dust storms. So what this
implies is that we can expect more dust coming to the Arctic with
time," he said.
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