Abstract

Abstract. The Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS), operated by the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts on behalf of the European Commission, provides daily analyses and 5 d forecasts of atmospheric composition, including forecasts of volcanic sulfur dioxide (SO2) in near real time. CAMS currently assimilates total column SO2 products from the GOME-2 instruments on MetOp-B and MetOp-C and the TROPOMI instrument on Sentinel-5P, which give information about the location and strength of volcanic plumes. However, the operational TROPOMI and GOME-2 data do not provide any information about the height of the volcanic plumes, and therefore some prior assumptions need to be made in the CAMS data assimilation system about where to place the resulting SO2 increments in the vertical. In the current operational CAMS configuration, the SO2 increments are placed in the mid-troposphere, around 550 hPa or 5 km. While this gives good results for the majority of volcanic emissions, it will clearly be wrong for eruptions that inject SO2 at very different altitudes, in particular exceptional events where part of the SO2 plume reaches the stratosphere. A new algorithm, developed by the German Aerospace Centre (DLR) for GOME-2 and TROPOMI, optimized in the frame of the ESA-funded Sentinel-5P Innovation–SO2 Layer Height Project, and known as the Full-Physics Inverse Learning Machine (FP_ILM) algorithm, retrieves SO2 layer height from TROPOMI in near real time (NRT) in addition to the SO2 column. CAMS is testing the assimilation of these products, making use of the NRT layer height information to place the SO2 increments at a retrieved altitude. Assimilation tests with the TROPOMI SO2 layer height data for the Raikoke eruption in June 2019 show that the resulting CAMS SO2 plume heights agree better with IASI plume height data than operational CAMS runs without the TROPOMI SO2 layer height information and show that making use of the additional layer height information leads to improved SO2 forecasts. Including the layer height information leads to higher modelled total column SO2 values in better agreement with the satellite observations. However, the plume area and SO2 burden are generally also overestimated in the CAMS analysis when layer height data are used. The main reason for this overestimation is the coarse horizontal resolution used in the minimizations. By assimilating the SO2 layer height data, the CAMS system can predict the overall location of the Raikoke SO2 plume up to 5 d in advance for about 20 d after the initial eruption, which is better than with the operational CAMS configuration (without prior knowledge of the plume height) where the forecast skill is much more reduced for longer forecast lead times.

Highlights

  • Volcanoes can cause serious disruptions for society, not just for people living near them and further afield when ash and sulfur dioxide (SO2) emitting from highly explosive eruptions reach the upper troposphere or stratosphere and are transported over vast distances by the prevailing winds

  • The SO2 satellite data currently used in the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) near real time (NRT) system are the operational total column-integrated SO2 amount (TCSO2) products from TROPOMI on S5P produced by European Space Agency (ESA) and from the Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment-2 (GOME-2) instruments on MetOp-B and MetOp-C produced by EUMETSAT’s ACSAF

  • We evaluate the SO2 analyses and forecasts against GOME-2B and TROPOMI NRT TCSO2 data

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Summary

Introduction

Volcanoes can cause serious disruptions for society, not just for people living near them and further afield when ash and sulfur dioxide (SO2) emitting from highly explosive eruptions reach the upper troposphere or stratosphere (above the clouds) and are transported over vast distances by the prevailing winds. While this method produces good results for a large number of volcanic eruptions that inject SO2 into the mid-troposphere, it will clearly be wrong for eruptions that inject SO2 at very different altitudes, in particular for the most explosive events, where part of the SO2 reaches the stratosphere In those cases, the CAMS system will not be able to forecast the SO2 transport well because the model SO2 plume will be located at the wrong altitude where the prevailing winds might transport the SO2 in the wrong direction or height. The parameters (plume height and emission flux) derived in this way can subsequently be used to provide a volcanic SO2 source term in the CAMS forecast model and can be used in the data assimilation system to modify the SO2 background error standard deviation to peak at the corresponding model level

Datasets
NRT TROPOMI TCSO2 data
NRT GOME-2 TCSO2 data
IASI SO2 plume altitude data
CAMS volcanic SO2 plume forecasting system
CAMS data assimilation system
Data assimilation configuration for TCSO2 LH data
Raikoke eruption June 2019
Sensitivity studies for assimilation of TCSO2 data
Results of TCSO2 assimilation tests for the Raikoke 2019 eruption
Evaluation of TCSO2 analyses
Vertical location of the SO2 plume
Quality of the 5 d TCSO2 forecasts
Conclusions
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