Dust Devils and Dustless Vortices on a Desert Playa Observed with Surface Pressure and Solar Flux Logging
نویسندگان
چکیده
Dust devils are convective vortices rendered visible by lofted dust, and may be a significant means of injecting dust into the atmosphere, on both Earth and Mars. The fraction of vortices that are dust-laden is not well-understood, however. Here we report a May/June 2013 survey on a Nevada desert playa using small stations that record pressure and solar flux with high time resolution (2 Hz): these data allow detection of vortices and an estimate of the dust opacity of the subset of vortices that geometrically occult the sun. The encounter rate of vortex pressure drops of 0.3 hPa or larger is 50–80 per 100 days, with 0.6 hPa or larger drops occurring about 3 times less often. Obscuration events associated with pressure drops occur less frequently, in part because near-misses must be in the sunward direction to cause attenuation of the solar beam and in part because some vortices are not dust-laden. 40% of vortex events had no detectable attenuation, and only 20% of events caused dimming greater than about 2% (a maximum of 35%), with stronger dimming tending to occur with larger pressure drops. The distribution suggests dust lifting may be dominated by a few intense devils, complicating estimation of the total flux into the atmosphere. 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is anopenaccess article under the CCBY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/).
منابع مشابه
Observing desert dust devils with a pressure logger
A commercial pressure logger has been adapted for long-term field use. Its flash memory affords the large data volume to allow months of pressure measurements to be acquired at the rapid cadence (> 1 Hz) required to detect dust devils, small dust-laden convective vortices observed in arid regions. The power consumption of the unit is studied and battery and solar/battery options evaluated for l...
متن کاملIrregular dust devil pressure drops on Earth and Mars: Effect of cycloidal tracks
In a survey of dust devil activity at a desert playa using continuous monitoring by a pressure logger, we have detected a number of pressure drops with complex structures: simple and symmetric drops make up only 25–30% of the total. In contrast to the simple, symmetric single-dip profiles expected for singlecell vertical vortices gliding past the pressure sensor, many profiles have an asymmetri...
متن کاملDust devils as observed by Mars Pathfinder
[1] Dust devils are localized meteorological phenomena frequently observed in terrestrial dry lands and desert landscapes as well as on Mars. They are low-pressure, warm core vortices that form at the bottom of convective plumes and loft dust from the surface. They move with the speed of the ambient wind and are tilted by wind shears. The Mars Pathfinder detected dust devils as dust plumes in t...
متن کاملA Multiyear Dust Devil Vortex Survey Using an Automated Search of Pressure Time Series
Dust devils occur in arid climates on the Earth and ubiquitously on Mars, where they likely dominate the supply of atmospheric dust and influence climate. Martian dust devils have been studied with a combination of orbiting and landed spacecraft, while most studies of terrestrial dust devils have involved manned monitoring of field sites, which can be costly both in time and personnel. As an al...
متن کاملRadiative Transfer Modelling of Dust Devils
Copyright and Moral Rights for the articles on this site are retained by the individual authors and/or other copyright owners. For more information on Open Research Online's data policy on reuse of materials please consult the policies page. This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of t...
متن کامل