N. S. Dixon
University of Leeds
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Featured researches published by N. S. Dixon.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2013
Bernd Heinold; Peter Knippertz; John H. Marsham; Stephanie Fiedler; N. S. Dixon; Kerstin Schepanski; B. Laurent; Ina Tegen
[1] Convective cold pools and the breakdown of nocturnal low-level jets (NLLJs) are key meteorological drivers of dust emission over summertime West Africa, the world’s largest dust source. This study is the first to quantify their relative contributions and physical interrelations using objective detection algorithms and an off-line dust emission model applied to convection-permitting simulations from the Met Office Unified Model. The study period covers 25 July to 02 September 2006. All estimates may therefore vary on an interannual basis. The main conclusions are as follows: (a) approximately 40% of the dust emissions are from NLLJs, 40% from cold pools, and 20% from unidentified processes (dry convection, land-sea and mountain circulations); (b) more than half of the cold-pool emissions are linked to a newly identified mechanism where aged cold pools form a jet above the nocturnal stable layer; (c) 50% of the dust emissions occur from 1500 to 0200 LT with a minimum around sunrise and after midday, and 60% of the morning-to-noon emissions occur under clear skies, but only 10% of the afternoon-to-nighttime emissions, suggesting large biases in satellite retrievals; (d) considering precipitation and soil moisture effects, cold-pool emissions are reduced by 15%; and (e) models with parameterized convection show substantially less cold-pool emissions but have larger NLLJ contributions. The results are much more sensitive to whether convection is parameterized or explicit than to the choice of the land-surface characterization, which generally is a large source of uncertainty. This study demonstrates the need of realistically representing moist convection and stable nighttime conditions for dust modeling. Citation: Heinold, B., P. Knippertz, J. H. Marsham, S. Fiedler, N. S. Dixon, K. Schepanski, B. Laurent, and I. Tegen (2013), The role of deep convection and nocturnal low-level jets for dust emission in summertime West Africa: Estimates from convection-permitting simulations, J. Geophys. Res. Atmos., 118, 4385–4400, doi:10.1002/jgrd.50402.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2013
Christopher M. Taylor; Cathryn E. Birch; Douglas J. Parker; N. S. Dixon; Françoise Guichard; Grigory Nikulin; Grenville M. S. Lister
Feedback between soil moisture and precipitation influence climate variability in semiarid regions. However, serious concerns exist about the ability of coarse-scale global atmospheric models to depict one key aspect of the feedback loop, namely the sensitivity of daytime convection to soil moisture. Here we compare regional simulations using a single model, run at different spatial resolutions, and with convective parameterizations switched on or off against Sahelian observations. Convection-permitting simulations at 4 and 12 km capture the observed relationships between soil moisture and convective triggering, emphasizing the importance of surface-driven mesoscale dynamics. However, with the inclusion of the convection scheme at 12 km, the behavior of the model fundamentally alters, switching from negative to positive feedback. Similar positive feedback is found in 9 out of 10 Regional Climate Models run at 50 km. These results raise questions about the accuracy of the feedback in regional models based on current convective parameterizations.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011
Thorwald H. M. Stein; Douglas J. Parker; Julien Delanoë; N. S. Dixon; Robin J. Hogan; Peter Knippertz; Ross Maidment; John H. Marsham
The West African summer monsoon (WAM) is an important driver of the global climate and locally provides most of the annual rainfall. A solid climatological knowledge of the complex vertical cloud structure is invaluable to forecasters and modelers to improve the understanding of the WAM. In this paper, 4 years of data from the CloudSat profiling radar and CALIPSO are used to create a composite zonal mean vertical cloud and precipitation structure for the WAM. For the first time, the near-coincident vertical radar and lidar profiles allow for the identification of individual cloud types from optically thin cirrus and shallow cumulus to congestus and deep convection. A clear diurnal signal in zonal mean cloud structure is observed for the WAM, with deep convective activity enhanced at night producing extensive anvil and cirrus, while daytime observations show more shallow cloud and congestus. A layer of altocumulus is frequently observed over the Sahara at night and day, extending southward to the coastline, and the majority of this cloud is shown to contain supercooled liquid in the top. The occurrence of deep convective systems and congestus in relation to the position of the African easterly jet is studied, but only the daytime cumulonimbus distribution indicates some influence of the jet position.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2011
John H. Marsham; Peter Knippertz; N. S. Dixon; Douglas J. Parker; Grenville M. S. Lister
Geophysical Research Letters | 2013
John H. Marsham; N. S. Dixon; Luis Garcia-Carreras; Grenville M. S. Lister; Douglas J. Parker; Peter Knippertz; Cathryn E. Birch
Atmospheric Environment | 2005
J.W.D. Boddy; R.J. Smalley; N. S. Dixon; James Tate; Alison S. Tomlin
Boundary-Layer Meteorology | 2004
Andrew N. Ross; S. Arnold; S. B. Vosper; S. D. Mobbs; N. S. Dixon; Alan Robins
Atmospheric Environment | 2006
N. S. Dixon; J.W.D. Boddy; R.J. Smalley; Alison S. Tomlin
Atmospheric Environment | 2007
N. S. Dixon; Alison S. Tomlin
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2013
R. R. Burton; Gerard M. Devine; Douglas J. Parker; Patrick Chazette; N. S. Dixon; Cyrille Flamant; James M. Haywood