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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2017-11-25
    Description: Mid-level clouds, located between 2 and 9 km height, are ubiquitous in the tropical belt. However, few studies have documented their characteristics and tried to identify the associated thermodynamical properties, in particular in West Africa. This region is characterized by a strong seasonality with precipitation occurring in the Sahel from June to September (monsoon season). This period also coincides with the annual maximum of the cloud cover. Here, we document the macro- and microphysical properties of mid-level clouds, the environment in which such clouds occur, as well as their radiative properties across West Africa. To do so, we combined high resolution observations from two ground-based sites (including lidar and cloud radar) in contrasted environments: one in the Sahel (Niamey, AMMA campaign, 2006) and the other in the Sahara (Bordj Badji Mokhtar, Fennec campaign, June 2011) along with the merged CloudSat-CALIPSO satellite products. The results show that, mid-level clouds are found throughout the year with a predominance around the monsoon season early in the morning. They also are preferentially observed in the southern and western part of West Africa. They are usually thin (most of them are less than 1000 m deep) and as observed in Niamey, mainly composed of liquid water. A clustering method applied to Niamey data allows to distinguish three different types of clouds: one with low bases, one with high bases and another with large thicknesses. The two first cloud families are capped by an inversion. The last family is associated with a large vertical moisture transport and likely has the highest radiative effect at the Earth's surface among the three cloud types.
    Print ISSN: 0035-9009
    Electronic ISSN: 1477-870X
    Topics: Geography , Physics
    Published by Wiley
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