P3.8
Nocturnal Stratiform Cloudiness during the West African monsoon

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Thursday, 2 February 2006
Nocturnal Stratiform Cloudiness during the West African monsoon
Exhibit Hall A2 (Georgia World Congress Center)
Jon M. Schrage, Creighton Univ., Omaha, NE; and S. Augustyn and A. H. Fink

Poster PDF (849.9 kB)

An analysis of METEOSAT satellite images and synoptic reports from Parakou, Benin suggests that nights that lack deep convection during the West African monsoon are often either completely clear or completely overcast. Using radiosonde observations gathered at Parakou during the summer of 2002 and ECMWF operational analyses, the composite structure of the atmosphere for both cloudy and clear nights are presented. Cloudy nights are found to occur when turbulent processes result in large scale speed convergence in the boundary and a positive net moisture flux convergence, whereas the clear conditions occur when a nocturnal inversion decouples the boundary layer from the surface. The cloudy and clear conditions are also shown to be related to large-scale changes in the configurations of the African Easterly Jet and the Tropical Easterly Jet, although the nature of this relationship remains unclear.