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Dust episodes in Hong Kong (South China) and their relationship with the Sharav and Mongolian cyclones and jet streams

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Abstract

The study presented in this paper analyses two dust episodes in Hong Kong, one occurring in March 2006 and the other on 22 March 2010. The latter is the worst dust episode on Hong Kong record. The focus is on the relationship between the dust episodes and the Sharav/Mongolian cyclones and jet streams. The 16 March 2006 episode is traceable to a continental-scale Saharan dust outbreak of 5–9 March 2006 caused by the cold front of an East Mediterranean Sharav cyclone arriving at north-west Africa on 5 March 2006. The eastward movement of the cyclone along the North African coast is clearly illustrated in the geopotential height contours. Simulations by the chemistry transport model GOCART provide a visible evidence of the transport as well as an estimate of contributions from the Sahara to the aerosol concentration levels in Hong Kong. The transport simulations suggest that the dust is injected to the polar jet north of the Caspian Sea, while it is transported eastward simultaneously by the more southerly subtropical jet. The major source of dust for Hong Kong is usually the Gobi desert. Despite the effect of remote sources, the 16 March 2006 dust episode was still mainly under the influence of the Mongolian cyclone cold fronts. In the recent episode of 22 March 2010, the influence of the Mongolian cyclone predominated as well. It appears that the concurrent influence of the Sharav and Mongolian cyclones on Hong Kong and East Asia is not a common occurrence. Besides transporting dusts from non-East Asian sources to Hong Kong and East Asia, the strong subtropical jet on 21 March 2010 (i.e. 1 day prior to the major dust episode) is believed to have strengthened an easterly monsoon surge to South China causing the transport of voluminous dusts to Taiwan and Hong Kong the following day.

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Acknowledgement

The work described in this paper was supported by a grant from City University of Hong Kong (project no. 7002458). Thanks are due to the Guy Carpenter Asia-Pacific Climate Impact Centre of the City University of Hong Kong for research grant support. The provision of air quality data by the Environmental Protection Department of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region and the advice of Dr Roland Draxler of NOAA are gratefully acknowledged.

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Correspondence to Mark Wenig.

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Lee, Y.C., Wenig, M., Zhang, Z. et al. Dust episodes in Hong Kong (South China) and their relationship with the Sharav and Mongolian cyclones and jet streams. Air Qual Atmos Health 5, 413–424 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11869-011-0134-7

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