Observations of the nocturnal boundary layer associated with the West African monsoon

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Abstract

A set of nighttime tethered balloon and kite measurements from the central Sahel (15.2°N, 1.3°W) in August 2005 were acquired and analyzed. A composite of all the nights' data was produced using boundary layer height to normalize measured altitudes. The observations showed some typical characteristics of nocturnal boundary layer development, notably a strong inversion after sunset and the formation of a low-level nocturnal jet later in the night. On most nights, the sampled jet did not change direction significantly during the night. The boundary layer thermodynamic structure displayed some variations from one night to the next. This was investigated using two contrasting case studies from the period. In one of these case studies (18 August 2005), the low-level wind direction changed significantly during the night. This change was captured well by two large-scale models, suggesting that the large-scale dynamics had a significant impact on boundary layer winds on this night. For both case studies, the models tended to underestimate near-surface wind speeds during the night, which is a feature that may lead to an underestimation of moisture flux northward by models. © 2010 American Meteorological Society.

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Bain, C. L., Parker, D. J., Taylor, C. M., Kergoat, L., & Guichard, F. (2010). Observations of the nocturnal boundary layer associated with the West African monsoon. Monthly Weather Review, 138(8), 3142–3156. https://doi.org/10.1175/2010MWR3287.1

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