Abstract

Abstract. An inverse transport modeling approach based on the concepts of sequential importance resampling and parallel computing is presented to reconstruct altitude-resolved time series of volcanic emissions, which often cannot be obtained directly with current measurement techniques. A new inverse modeling and simulation system, which implements the inversion approach with the Lagrangian transport model Massive-Parallel Trajectory Calculations (MPTRAC) is developed to provide reliable transport simulations of volcanic sulfur dioxide (SO2). In the inverse modeling system MPTRAC is used to perform two types of simulations, i.e., unit simulations for the reconstruction of volcanic emissions and final forward simulations. Both types of transport simulations are based on wind fields of the ERA-Interim meteorological reanalysis of the European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasts. The reconstruction of altitude-dependent SO2 emission time series is also based on Atmospheric InfraRed Sounder (AIRS) satellite observations. A case study for the eruption of the Nabro volcano, Eritrea, in June 2011, with complex emission patterns, is considered for method validation. Meteosat Visible and InfraRed Imager (MVIRI) near-real-time imagery data are used to validate the temporal development of the reconstructed emissions. Furthermore, the altitude distributions of the emission time series are compared with top and bottom altitude measurements of aerosol layers obtained by the Cloud–Aerosol Lidar with Orthogonal Polarization (CALIOP) and the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding (MIPAS) satellite instruments. The final forward simulations provide detailed spatial and temporal information on the SO2 distributions of the Nabro eruption. By using the critical success index (CSI), the simulation results are evaluated with the AIRS observations. Compared to the results with an assumption of a constant flux of SO2 emissions, our inversion approach leads to an improvement of the mean CSI value from 8.1 to 21.4 % and the maximum CSI value from 32.3 to 52.4 %. The simulation results are also compared with those reported in other studies and good agreement is observed. Our new inverse modeling and simulation system is expected to become a useful tool to also study other volcanic eruption events.

Highlights

  • Observing trace gases and ash released by volcanic eruptions is important for various reasons

  • Our findings for the critical success index (CSI) are confirmed by the false alarm rate (FAR) and probability of detection (POD) time series (Fig. 10, lower panels), which indicates that the use of product rule yields the best simulation results of the three cases

  • We presented an inversion approach based on the concept of sequential importance resampling for the reconstruction of volcanic emission rates from infrared nadir satellite observations

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Summary

Introduction

Observing trace gases and ash released by volcanic eruptions is important for various reasons. Several parameters such as the matrix of model sensitivities of observations to source terms and the regularization parameters that tune the smoothness of the solution needed to be provided a priori Other work such as Flemming and Inness (2013) used satellite retrievals of SO2 total columns to estimate initial conditions for subsequent SO2 plume forecasts by applying the Monitoring Atmospheric Composition and Climate (MACC) system (Stein et al, 2012), which is an extension of the 4D-Var system of the European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). We present a new inverse modeling and simulation system that can be used to establish reliable transport simulations for volcanic SO2 emissions with available meteorological data and satellite observations.

MPTRAC
Validation data sets
Inversion by means of sequential importance resampling
A measure of goodness-of-fit for forward simulations
Iterative update of importance weights and resampling strategies
Simulation setup
Examples of unit simulations
Reconstruction of volcanic SO2 emissions
Sensitivity analysis for the weight-updating schemes
Validation of emission time series
Final forward simulations
Conclusions and outlook
Findings
Code and data availability
Full Text
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