Importance of the Saharan Heat Low on the control of the North Atlantic free tropospheric humidity deduced from IASI δD observations
Abstract. The isotopic composition of water vapour in the North Atlantic free troposphere is investigated with IASI measurements of the D/H ratio (δD) above the ocean. We show that in the vicinity of West Africa, the seasonality of δD is particularly strong (160 ‰), which is related with the installation of the Saharan Heat Low (SHL) during summertime. The SHL indeed largely influences the dynamic in that region by producing deep turbulent mixing layers, yielding a specific water vapor isotopic footprint. The influence of the SHL on the isotopic budget is analysed at various time and space scales and is shown to be large, highlighting the importance of the SHL dynamics on the moistening and the HDO-enrichment of the free troposphere over the North Atlantic. We also report important inter-annual variations of δD above Izana (Canary Islands) that we interpret, using backward trajectory analyses, in terms of the ratio of air-masses coming from the North Atlantic and air-masses coming from the African continent. Finally, we present spatial distributions of δD and humidity above the North Atlantic and we show that the different sources and dehydration pathways controlling the humidity can be disentangled thanks to the added value of δD observations.