Satellite Based Top-Down Approach for Modelling Aerosol Source Strength and its Application in Discerning Rainfall Trends
Date
2021
Authors
Nizar, Sinan.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
This thesis is dedicated to study the possible relationship between the distribution
of aerosols and rainfall patterns. The thesis proposes a new approach, wherein aerosol
sources are investigated rather than the aerosol loading in a region to understand its
variation with rainfall. The study first investigates the influence of meteorological parameters
indicating both advection and diffusion on the spatiotemporal distribution of
aerosols over the Indian subcontinent and the adjacent Indian Ocean. The research
inferences are then used to develop a model to estimate aerosol emissions using satellite
data. Further, the spatial aerosol source distribution is used to investigate rainfall
variability over southern India.
The prevailing meteorological conditions that influence the advection and diffusion
of the atmosphere govern the distribution of atmospheric particles from its sources. The
present study first explores the spatiotemporal distribution of atmospheric aerosols over
the Indian subcontinent and its dependence on the prevailing meteorological conditions.
Eleven years of Aerosol Optical Depth obtained from the Moderate Resolution Imaging
Spectroradiometer along with meteorological parameters extracted from reanalysis
data are analysed at monthly timescales. Wind speed, wind divergence and planetary
boundary layer height are studied as parameters for advection and diffusion of atmospheric
aerosols. The result shows the importance of both advection and diffusion in
distributing aerosols over the region. The result shows higher aerosol loading during
the monsoon season with increased spatial variability.Wind speed and divergence correlate
with AOD values both over land (R = 0.75) and ocean (R = 0.82) with increased
aerosol loading at higher wind speeds, which are converging in nature. Owing to the
varied climatology of the Indian subcontinent, land and ocean areas were classified into
subregions. Analysis was carried out over these subregions to infer the influence of
meteorological conditions on aerosol loading. Results are indicative of a distinct characteristic
in the prevailing meteorological conditions that influence the distribution of
ii
certain aerosol types. Further, the PBLH was analysed as an indicator of atmospheric
diffusion to infer its importance in aerosol distribution. The results indicate that PBLH
explains almost 30 to 90% of the total variance in AOD over the subregions which is
particularly evident during the winter and pre-monsoon seasons.
The study further uses a Lagrangian approach to the Advection Diffusion Equation
to estimate the transported aerosols and hence the Aerosol Source Strength using
satellite-measured Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) and reanalysis wind data. This
top-down approach is based on the advection and diffusion of atmospheric aerosols
considering wind circulation and atmospheric conditions rather than using indicative
parameters. To validate the current top down approach, the study first utilises the AOD
measurements from the GOES-16 for California and then applies the methodology over
southern India using MODIS to identify aerosol hotspots. The results over California
are indicative of higher ASS around wildfire locations. The ASS values also show good
correlation (R2 = 0.886) with Fire Radiative Power (FRP) obtained from TerraMODIS
fire product. Themethodwas further applied to investigate the spatial correlation of ASS
with power plant density, which reveals a steady increase in ASS with power plant density
(R2 = 0.82).
Finally the study investigates the possible relationship between rainfall and aerosol
source distribution over southern India during the pre-monsoon season. Aerosol and
rainfall trends are computed using Mann Kendall trend test and are correlated spatially
with AOD and ASS. To further understand the relationship, cloud microphysics is also
investigated. The results indicate that, though the aerosol loading initially supports
cloud formation resulting in deeper and wider clouds, higher aerosol loading inhibits
cloud formation resulting in narrow and shallow clouds. This in turn decreases rainfall
at higher aerosol loading with smaller cloud radius.
Description
Keywords
Department of Water Resources and Ocean Engineering, Aerosols, rainfall, cloud microphysics, AOD, MODIS, aerosol sources, wildfire, power plant, biomass burning