6533b861fe1ef96bd12c4e02

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Heat wave occurrences over Senegal during spring: regionalization and synoptic patterns.

Marie-jeanne SambouMarie-jeanne SambouAmadou Thierno GayeSerge JanicotAbdou Lahat DiengBenjamin PohlDaouda Badiane

subject

heat waveAtmospheric ScienceDaytime010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesAtmospheric circulationatmospheric circulation0207 environmental engineering02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesDaily maximum temperatureSpring (hydrology)020701 environmental engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesgeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryMoisturetemperatureHeat waveSenegalApparent temperature13. Climate actionHomogeneous[SDU.STU.CL]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/ClimatologyClimatologyregionalizationEnvironmental science

description

18 pages; International audience; Based on 12 Senegalese stations of the Global Summary of the Day (GSOD) database (1979–2014), heat waves (HW) are defined for each station in spring (March–April–May, the hottest season in Senegal) as the daily maximum temperature (Tx), minimum temperature (Tn), or average apparent temperature of the day (AT), exceeding the corresponding 95% mobile percentile for at least three consecutive days. A hierarchical cluster analysis used to regionalize HW in these 12 stations is applied to simultaneous occurrences of daily temperature peaks over their 95% mobile percentiles. Three homogeneous zones of four stations each are identified (Zone 1, Zone 2 and Zone 3), from west (Atlantic coastline) to east (inland Senegal). Atmospheric circulation associated with HW is assessed through composites of ERA‐Interim deseasonalized anomalies, with the start date of each HW in each zone used as a reference. The main pattern controlling the presence of HW in Senegal consists in positive pressure anomalies centred around the strait of Gibraltar, promoting easterly to northeasterly wind anomalies. This causes higher temperatures in the three zones of Senegal, and lower temperatures and drier air over the central Sahel. This pattern is opposite to that characteristic of HW in the central Sahel shown in previous studies. From Zone 1 to Zone 3, the temperature and moisture patterns are shifted to the east while pressure anomalies weaken drastically. Night‐time Tn‐HW are characterized by higher water vapour contents than daytime Tx‐HW, corroborating and complementing previous studies over the Sahel. These HW patterns are close to the canonical mode of intra‐seasonal atmospheric variability over Senegal.

10.1002/joc.6220https://hal.science/hal-02445911