Effectual radar satellite monitoring of the initial stages of sandstorm formation and progress in the Sahara Desert
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36023/ujrs.2025.12.4.289Keywords:
radar remote sensing, desert sandstorm monitoring, stages of sandstorm research, complex radar monitoringAbstract
The article is devoted to the elaboration and possibilities of using the method of stage-by-stage satellite radar monitoring of aeolian processes as sources of sandstorms in the process of their growth. The method is based on an experimental study of the effect of anomalous narrow-directional backscattering of radio waves (ANDBR) from an electrically conductive layer formed under the action of the wind, bordering the surface of the barchan. The causes of the formation of such a layer are described, taking into account the physics of the interaction of negatively charged particles when they collide with the surface and with each other in the air. A modified model of combined facet backscattering (MMCFB) by leeward slopes of barchans and ripples located on windward and leeward slopes of barchans is proposed. It should be noted that the angles of these slopes, being the angles of repose of sand, remain constant under radar irradiation at any wavelength. As a result, a comprehensive monitoring of sandstorm characteristics is proposed, during all stages of their passage, using the processing of data from groups of radar satellites operating at the same or different wavelengths. For such type of monitoring, the overall range of surface irradiation angles is also not significant and such fast-passing processes as erosion, evaporation, etc. are excluded from consideration. The obtained data after statistical processing can be compared with field measurement data. The manifestations of the first stages of sandstorm occurrence in fragments of radar images have been confirmed and explained. Prospects for studying the development of storms at the next stages are proposed.
Contributions of Authors: Conceptualization, O.Ya. Matveev. and S. A. Velichko; methodology, O.Ya. Matveev. S. A. Velichko. V. N. Tsymbal and V. K. Ivanov; formal analysis, O.Ya. Matveev, S. A. Velichko and D. M. Bychkov; investigation, O.Ya. Matveev, S. A. Velichko, D. M. Bychkov and O. M. Stadnyk; data processing, O.Ya. Matveev, S. A. Velichko, D. M. Bychkov and O. M. Stadnyk; writing—original draft preparation: O.Ya. Matveev and S. A. Velichko; writing—review and editing O.Ya. Matveev. S. A. Velichko, V. N. Tsymbal, V. K. Ivanov, D. M. Bychkov and O. M. Stadnyk; visualization, O.Ya. Matveev and D. M. Bychkov. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding: This research received no external funding.
Data Availability Statement: Not applicable.
Acknowledgments: The authors express their sincere gratitude to Earth Observing System Data Analytics (eosda.com) for providing free digital radar images of the Envisat SAR within the framework of the ESA project id:13193. We are also grateful to reviewers and editors for their valuable comments, recommendations, and attention to the work.
Conflicts of Interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
References
Baas A. C. W. (2008) Challenges in aeolian geomorphology: Investigating Aeolian streamers Geomorphology 93 3-16
Bagnold R. A. (1936) The movement of desert sand Proc. R. Soc. Lond. A 157 0594–620.
Bagnold, R. A.(1941), The Physics of Blown Sand and Desert Barchans, Methuen, New York.
Bagnold R. A. (1973), Nature of saltation and bed-load transport in water Proc. R. Soc. Lond. A 332, 473–504.
Belly, P. (1962). Sand movement by wind, United States army corps of engineers. (Vol. I). Coastal Engineering Research Center, Technical Memorandum.
Besnard, J.-B., Dupont, P., El Moctar, A. O., & Valance, A. (2022). Aeolian erosion thresholds for cohesive sand. Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface, 127, e2022JF006803. https://doi.org/10.1029/2022JF006803
Carneiro M. V., N. A. M. Araújo, T. Pühtz and H. J. Herrmann (2013), Midair collisions enhance saltation arXiv:1212.4603v2 [physics.ao-ph] 8
Chepil, W. (1956). Influence of moisture on erodibility of soil by wind. Soil Science Society Proceedings, 20(2), 288–292. https://doi.org/10.2136/sssaj1956.03615995002000020033x
Cornelis W. M. and D. Gabriels, (2003b). The effect of surface moisture on the entrainment of barchan sand by wind: an evaluation of selected models, Sedimentology, 50, 771–790 doi: 10.1046/j.1365-3091.2003.00577
Cornelis, W. M., Gabriels, D., & Hartmann, R. (2004). A conceptual model to predict the deflation threshold shear velocity as affected by near-surface soil water. Soil Science Society of America Journal, 68(4), 1154–1161. https://doi.org/10.2136/sssaj2004.1154
Dong Z. B. and Qian G. Q. (2007), Characterizing the height profile of the flux of wind-eroded sediment Environ. Geol. 51 835–45.
Dur´an O., Claudin P. and Andreotti B. (2011), On aeolian transport: grain-scale interactions, dynamical mechanisms and scaling laws Aeolian Res. 3, 243–70.
Ellwood, J.M.& Evans, P.D.& Wilson, I.G.,(1975). "Small scale Aeolian bedforms", J. Sediment. Petrol., vol. 45, 554-561.
Forward, K. M., D. J. Lacks, and R. M. Sankaran (2009), Charge Segregation Depends on Particle Size in Triboelectrically Charged Granular Materials, Phys. Rev. Lett., 102(2), 028001].
Gillette, D.A., I. H. Blifford, and D. W. Fryrear (1974), The influence of wind velocity on the size distribution of aerosols generated by the wind erosion of soils, J. Geophys. Res., 79, 4068-4075.
Gillette, D. A., and T. R. Walker (1977), Characteristics of airborne particles produced by wind erosion of sandy soil, high plains of west Texas, Soil Science, 123(2), 97-110.
Greeley R. & J. D. Iversen (1985). Wind as a Geological Process on Earth, Mars, Venus and Titan. Cambridge Planetary Science Series no. 4. xii + 333 pp. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0 521 24385 8.
Hamzah M. Beakawi Al-Hashemi, Omar S. Baghabra Al-Amoudi (2018). A review on the angle of repose of granular materials. Powder Technology, 330, 397–417. ELSEVIER Publ., DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.powtec.2018.02.003.
Herrmann L., Stahr K., Jahn R. (1999) The importance of source region identification and their properties for soil-derived dust: the case of Harmattan dust sources for eastern West Africa // Contributions to Atmospheric Physics. 72. P. 141–150.
T.D. Ho, A. Valance, P. Dupont, A. (2014), Ould El Moctar Aeolian sand transport: Length and height distributions of saltation trajectories. Aeolian Research, Volume 12, March pp. 65–74.
Inculet, I. I., G. S. P. Castle, and G. Aartsen (2006), Generation of bipolar electric fields during industrial handling of powders, Chem. Eng. Sci., 61(7), 2249-2253.;
Ivanov V. K., Matveyev A. Ya., Tsymbal V. N., Yatsevich S.Ye., Bychkov D. M. (2016) Spaceborne radar identification of desert regions as suppliers of dust into the atmosphere. Ukrainian Journal of Remote Sensing. 11. рр.22–30.
Ivanov, V. K. (Eds.) (2018). Radar monitoring of natural and anthropogenic hazardous phenomena. (Part 2). Lambert Academic Publishing, Germany. Retrieved from https: //www.lappublishing.com.
Jianhua Sun, Linna Zhao, Sixiong Zhao, Renjian Zhang, (2006) An integrated dust storm prediction system suitable for east Asia and its simulation results, Global and Planetary Change 52 71–87
Kenneth Pye, Haim Tsoar. (2009) Aeolian Sand and Sand Barchans. Berlin. Heidelberg: Springer, 458 p.
Kok, Jasper F. Renno, Nilton O. (2009).A comprehensive numerical model of steady state saltation (COMSALT), Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, Volume 114, Issue D17, CiteID D17204, September, DOI:10.1029/2009JD011702
Kok, J. F., and D. J. Lacks (2009), The triboelectrification of granular systems of identical insulators, Phys. Rev. E, in review, available online at http://arxiv.org/abs/0902.3411)
Kok Jasper F, Parteli Eric J R, Michaels Timothy I and Karam Diana B. (2012). The Physics of Wind-Blown Sand and Dust // Reports on Progress in Physics. 2012. Vol. 75. P. 106901.
M. Lämmel, D. Rings and K. Kroy A two-species continuum model for aeolian sand transport New Journal of Physics 14 (2012) 093037 (24pp) Published 20 September 2012.
Li, B., Ellis, J. T., Sherman, D. J., (2014). Estimating the Impact Threshold for Wind-Blown Sand. In: Green, A.N. and Cooper, J.A.G. (eds.), Proceedings 13th International Coastal Symposium (Durban, South Africa), Journal of Coastal Research, Special Issue No. 70, pp. 627-632, ISSN 0749-0208.
Lowell, J., and W. S. Truscott (1986), Triboelectrification of identical insulators: II. Theory and further experiments, J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys., 19, 1281-1298.
Malinovskaya, E.A. (2019). Transformation of aeolian relief forms under wind influence. Izvestiya RAN, Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics, 53(1), 54-64.
Matveev А. Ya., Velichko S. A., Bychkov D. M., Ivanov V. K., Tsymbal V. N. (2023). Modeling of radar scattering by aeolian desert landforms. Ukrainian Journal of Remote Sensing, 10(1), 4-10. https://doi.org/10.36023/ujrs.2023.10.1.226
Nickling W. G. and McKenna Neuman C. (2009), Aeolian sediment transport Geomorphology of Desert Environments ed A Parsons and A D Abrahams (New York: Springer) pp 517–555.
Owen P. R. (1964), Saltation of uniform grains in air J. Fluid Mech. 20, 225–42.
Schmidt, D.S., R.A. Schmidt, and J.D. Dent (1998), Electrostatic force on saltating sand, J. Geophys. Res., 103(D8), 8997-9001.
Shao, Y., M. R. Raupach, and P. A. Findlater (1993), Effect of saltation bombardment on the entrainment of dust by wind, Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres, 98(D7), 12719-12726.
Shao, Y. P., and H. Lu (2000), A simple expression for wind erosion threshold friction velocity, Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres, 105(D17), 22437-22443.
Shao Y. P. (2008), Physics and Modelling of Wind Erosion 2nd edn (Heidelberg: Springer)
Stephen, H., Long, D. G. (2005). Microwave backscatter modeling of erg surfaces in the Sahara Desert. IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, 43(2), 238-247.
Steven L. Namikas S.L. (2003) Field measurement and numerical modelling of aeolian mass flux distributions on a sandy beach. Sedimentologym, Volume 50, Issue 2, pp. 303–326. URL: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1365-3091.2003.00556.x
Ungar J. E. and Haff P. K. (1987), Steady-state saltation in air Sedimentology, 34, 289–99.
Velikanov M.A. (1981). Hydrology of land / L.: Gidrometeoizdat, 310 p.
Zender C. S., Bian H. S. and Newman D. (2003), Mineral Dust Entrainment and Deposition (DEAD) model: description and 1990s dust climatology J. Geophys. Res. 108 4416.
Zhaohui Lin, Jason K. Levy, Hang Lei and Michelle L. Bell (2012). Advances in Disaster Modeling, Simulation and Visualization for Sandstorm Risk Management in North China, Remote Sens. 2012, 4, 1337-1354; doi:10.3390/rs4051337
Zheng, X.J., N. Huang, and Y.-H. Zhou (2003), Laboratory measurement of electrification of wind-blown sands and simulation of its effect on sand saltation movement, J. Geophys. Res., 108(D10), 4322, doi:10.1029/2002JD002572
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Licensing conditions: the authors retain their copyrights and grant the journal the right of first publication of a work, simultaneously licensed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution License International CC-BY, which allows you to share the work with proof of authorship of the work and initial publication in this journal.
The authors, directing the manuscript to the editorial office of the Ukrainian Journal of Remote Sensing of the Earth, agree that the editorial board transfers the rights to protection and use of the manuscript (material submitted to the journal editorial board, including such protected copyright objects as photographs of the author, drawings, charts, tables, etc.), including reproduction in print and on the Internet; for distribution; to translate the manuscript into any languages; export and import of copies of the journal with the article of the authors for the purpose of distribution, informing the public. The above rights are transferred by the authors to the editors, without limitation of their validity, and in the territory of all countries of the world without limitation, including in Ukraine.
The authors guarantee that they have exclusive rights to use the submitted material. The editors are not liable to third parties for breach of data by the authors of the guarantees. The authors retain the right to use the published material, its fragments and parts for personal, including scientific and educational purposes. The rights to the manuscript are considered to be transferred by the authors of the editorial board from the moment of the publication of the issue of the journal in which it is published. Reprinting of materials published in the journal by other individuals and legal entities is possible only with the consent of the publisher, with the obligatory indication of the issue of the journal in which the material was published.