4.7 Article

The influence of eruption season on the global aerosol evolution and radiative impact of tropical volcanic eruptions

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
Volume 11, Issue 23, Pages 12351-12367

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/acp-11-12351-2011

Keywords

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Funding

  1. FP7 project IMPLICC

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Simulations of tropical volcanic eruptions using a general circulation model with coupled aerosol microphysics are used to assess the influence of season of eruption on the aerosol evolution and radiative impacts at the Earth's surface. This analysis is presented for eruptions with SO2 injection magnitudes of 17 and 700 Tg, the former consistent with estimates of the 1991 Mt. Pinatubo eruption, the later a near super eruption. For each eruption magnitude, simulations are performed with eruptions at 15 degrees N, at four equally spaced times of year. Sensitivity to eruption season of aerosol optical depth (AOD), clear-sky and all-sky shortwave (SW) radiative flux is quantified by first integrating each field for four years after the eruption, then calculating for each cumulative field the absolute or percent difference between the maximum and minimum response from the four eruption seasons. Eruption season has a significant influence on AOD and clear-sky SW radiative flux anomalies for both eruption magnitudes. The sensitivity to eruption season for both fields is generally weak in the tropics, but increases in the mid-and high latitudes, reaching maximum values of similar to 75%. Global mean AOD and clear-sky SW anomalies show sensitivity to eruption season on the order of 15-20%, which results from differences in aerosol effective radius for the different eruption seasons. Smallest aerosol size and largest cumulative impact result from a January eruption for Pinatubo-magnitude eruption, and from a July eruption for the near-super eruption. In contrast to AOD and clear-sky SW anomalies, all-sky SW anomalies are found to be insensitive to sea-son of eruption for the Pinatubo-magnitude eruption experiment, due to the reflection of solar radiation by clouds in the mid-to high latitudes. However, differences in all-sky SW anomalies between eruptions in different seasons are significant for the larger eruption magnitude, and the similar to 15% sensitivity to eruption season of the global mean all-sky SW anomalies is comparable to the sensitivity of global mean AOD and clear-sky SW anomalies. Our estimates of sensitivity to eruption season are larger than previously reported estimates: implications regarding volcanic AOD timeseries reconstructions and their use in climate models are discussed.

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