Uncertainty in aerosol-cloud radiative forcing is driven by clean conditions
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics European Geosciences Union (2023)
Tonga eruption increases chance of temporary surface temperature anomaly above 1.5 °C
Nature Climate Change Springer Nature 13 (2023) 127-129
Abstract:
On 15 January 2022, the Hunga Tonga–Hunga Ha’apai (HTHH) eruption injected 146 MtH2O and 0.42 MtSO2 into the stratosphere. This large water vapour perturbation means that HTHH will probably increase the net radiative forcing, unusual for a large volcanic eruption, increasing the chance of the global surface temperature anomaly temporarily exceeding 1.5 °C over the coming decade. Here we estimate the radiative response to the HTHH eruption and derive the increased risk that the global mean surface temperature anomaly shortly exceeds 1.5 °C following the eruption. We show that HTHH has a tangible impact of the chance of imminent 1.5 °C exceedance (increasing the chance of at least one of the next 5 years exceeding 1.5 °C by 7%), but the level of climate policy ambition, particularly the mitigation of short-lived climate pollutants, dominates the 1.5 °C exceedance outlook over decadal timescales.Quantification of gas, ash, and sulphate aerosols in volcanic plumes from open path Fourier transform infrared (OP-FTIR) emission measurements at Stromboli volcano, Italy
Frontiers in Earth Science Frontiers Media 10 (2023) 1005738
Abstract:
Field-portable Open Path Fourier Transform Infrared (OP-FTIR) spectrometers can be used to remotely measure the composition of volcanic plumes using absorption spectroscopy, providing invaluable data on total gas emissions. Quantifying the temporal evolution of gas compositions during an eruption helps develop models of volcanic processes and aids in eruption forecasting. Absorption measurements require a viewing geometry which aligns infrared source, plume, and instrument, which can be challenging. Here, we present a fast retrieval algorithm to estimate quantities of gas, ash and sulphate aerosols from thermal emission OP-FTIR measurements, and the results from two pilot campaigns on Stromboli volcano in Italy in 2019 and 2021. We validate the method by comparing time series of SO2 slant column densities retrieved using our method with those obtained from a conventional UV spectrometer, demonstrating that the two methods generally agree to within a factor of 2. The algorithm correctly identifies ash-rich plumes and gas bursts associated with explosions and quantifies the mass column densities and particle sizes of ash and sulphate aerosols (SA) in the plume. We compare the ash sizes retrieved using our method with the particle size distribution (PSD) of an ash sample collected during the period of measurements in 2019 by flying a Remotely Piloted Aircraft System into the path of a drifting ash plume and find that both modes of the bimodal PSD (a fine fraction with diameter around 5–10 μm and a coarse fraction around 65 μm) are identified within our datasets at different times. We measure a decrease in the retrieved ash particle size with distance downwind, consistent with settling of larger particles, which we also observed visually. We measure a decrease in the SO2/SA ratio as the plume travels downwind, coupled with an increase in measured SA particle size (range 2–6 μm), suggesting rapid hygroscopic particle growth and/or SO2 oxidation. We propose that infrared emission spectroscopy can be used to examine physical and chemical changes during plume transport and opens the possibility of remote night-time monitoring of volcanic plume emissions. These ground-based analyses may also aid the refinement of satellite-based aerosol retrievals.Volcanic Ash Density
University of Oxford (2023)
Abstract:
Unsieved ash density measurements from 23 unsieved raw ash samples originating from 15 volcanoes, including mass of sample measured with a digital scale and volume measured with a nitrogen gas pycnometer. Data measured in July-August 2022.Uncertainty-bounded estimates of ash cloud properties using the ORAC algorithm: application to the 2019 Raikoke eruption
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques European Geosciences Union 15:20 (2022) 5985-6010