Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Sicart Jean-Emmanuel, Espinoza J. C., Queno L., Medina M. (2016). Radiative properties of clouds over a tropical Bolivian glacier : seasonal variations and relationship with regional atmospheric circulation. International Journal of Climatology, 36 (8), p. 3116-3128. ISSN 0899-8418.

Titre du document
Radiative properties of clouds over a tropical Bolivian glacier : seasonal variations and relationship with regional atmospheric circulation
Année de publication
2016
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000378773200020
Auteurs
Sicart Jean-Emmanuel, Espinoza J. C., Queno L., Medina M.
Source
International Journal of Climatology, 2016, 36 (8), p. 3116-3128 ISSN 0899-8418
At low latitudes, strong seasonal changes in cloud cover and precipitation largely control the mass balance of glaciers. Measurements of shortwave and longwave radiation fluxes reaching Zongo glacier, Bolivia (16 degrees S, 5060m asl), were analysed from 2005 to 2013 to investigate cloud radiative properties. Cloud shortwave attenuation and longwave emission were greater in the wet summer season (DJF) than in the dry winter season (JJA) probably because most DJF clouds were low warm cumulus associated with local convection, whereas JJA clouds were frequently altostratus associated with extra-tropical perturbations. Solar irradiance was high all year round and cloud radiative forcing on down-welling fluxes was strongly negative, with monthly averages ranging from -60 to -110Wm(-2) from the dry to the wet season, respectively. In the wet season, high extraterrestrial solar irradiance and low shortwave transmissivity caused very negative cloud forcing despite the high longwave emissivity of convective clouds. Reanalysis of wind and geopotential height anomalies and outgoing longwave radiation satellite data were used to characterize the regional atmospheric circulation causing thick cloud covers (10% thickest clouds) during the dry (JJA), transition (SON), and wet (DJF) seasons. Around 87% (80%) of cloud events in JJA (SON) occurred during the incursion of low-level southern wind from southern South America to the Bolivian Andes, which caused 2-3 days of cold surge episodes in the Cordillera Real. Around 13% of cloudy days in JJA were associated with high-level low-pressure conditions over the Chilean coast around 45 degrees S, including cut-off lows. In SON, 20% of cloudy days were associated with summer conditions, characterized by an active Bolivian High and moist air advection from the Amazon basin. In the wet season, only 46% of thick cloud events were associated with low-level southern wind incursions, the other events being associated with the South American Monsoon.
Plan de classement
Sciences du milieu [021] ; Hydrologie [062]
Description Géographique
BOLIVIE ; ANDES
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010067619]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010067619
Contact