Abstract

Record-breaking wildfires raged in southeastern Australia in late December 2019 and early January 2020. Rather strong pyrocumulonimbus (pyroCb) convection developed over the fire areas and lifted enormous amounts of biomass-burning smoke into the tropopause region and caused the strongest wildfire-related stratospheric aerosol perturbation ever observed around the globe. We discuss the geometrical, optical, and microphyscial properties of the stratospheric smoke layers and the decay of this major stratospheric perturbation. A multiwavelength polarization Raman lidar at Punta Arenas (53.2° S, 70.9° W), southern Chile, and an elastic-backscatter Raman lidar at Río Grande (53.8° S, 67.7° W) in southern Argentina were operated to monitor the major record-breaking event until the end of 2021. These lidar measurements can be regarded as representative for mid to high latitudes in the Southern Hemisphere. A unique dynamical feature, an anticyclonic, smoke-filled vortex with 1000 km horizontal width and 5 km vertical extent, which ascended by about 500 m per day, was observed over the full last week of January 2020. The key results of the long-term study are as follows: The smoke layers extended, on average, from 9 to 24 km in height. The smoke partly ascended to more than 30 km height as a result of self-lifting processes. Clear signs of a smoke impact on the record-breaking ozone hole over Antarctica in September–November 2020 were found. A slow decay of the stratospheric perturbation detected by means of the 532 nm aerosol optical thickness (AOT) yielded an e-folding decay time of 19–20 months. The maximum smoke AOT was around 1.0 over Punta Arenas in January 2020 and thus two to three orders of magnitude above the stratospheric aerosol background of 0.005. After two months with strongly varying smoke conditions, the 532 nm AOT decreased to 0.03–0.06 from March–December 2020 and to 0.015–0.03 throughout 2021. The particle extinction coefficients were in the range of 10–75 Mm−1 in January 2020, and later on mostly between 1 and 5 Mm−1. Combined lidar-photometer retrievals revealed typical smoke extinction-to-backscatter ratios of 69 ±19 sr (at 355 nm), 91 ± 17 sr (at 532 nm), and 120 ± 22 sr (at 1064 nm). An ozone reduction of 20–25 % in the 15–22 km height range was observed over Antarctic and New Zealand ozonesonde stations in the smoke-polluted air with particle surface area concentrations of 1–5 μm2 cm−3.

Highlights

  • Strong and long-lasting bushfires in southeastern Australia (Boer et al, 2020) in combination with extraordinarily strong pyrocumulonimbus activity at the end of December 2019 and in the beginning of January 2020 induced a 25 major perturbation of the stratospheric aerosol conditions (Peterson et al, 2021)

  • Australian New Year Super Outbreak (ANYSO) occurred in two distinct phases, with the first and largest occurring during 29–31 December with an overall duration of about 45 h

  • PNE comprised less than 10 pyroCb pulses, caused the largest smoke-related stratospheric perturbation ever observed over Europe (Ansmann et al, 2018; Baars et al, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

Strong and long-lasting bushfires in southeastern Australia (Boer et al, 2020) in combination with extraordinarily strong pyrocumulonimbus (pyroCb) activity at the end of December 2019 and in the beginning of January 2020 induced a 25 major perturbation of the stratospheric aerosol conditions (Peterson et al, 2021). The Black Summer fire season of 2019–2020 in southeastern Australia, denoted as Australian New Year Super Outbreak (ANYSO) event by Peterson et al (2021) caused a three times higher stratospheric aerosol mass of injected smoke than the record-breaking Canadian wildfires (Pacific Northwest Event, PNE) in the Northern Hemisphere in 30 August 2017 (Peterson et al, 2018). We present long-term observations conducted with two ground-based Raman lidars at Punta Arenas, Chile, and Río Grande, Argentina, at the southernmost tip of South America These measurements can be regarded as representative for the southern part of the Southern Hemisphere (latitudes > 40◦S).

Polly and AERONET observations at Punta Arenas, Chile
CORAL observations at Río Grande, Argentina
The major stratospheric perturbation in January 2020
The unique self-organized, rotating and ascending smoke-filled vortex
Case studies from January 2020
The decay phase: observation over two years (2020-2021)
Smoke intensive parameters
Comparison of three major stratospheric smoke events
Conclusion and outlook
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