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Measurements of Stratospheric Water Vapor at Mauna Loa and the Effect of the Hunga Tonga Eruption
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  • Gerald E. Nedoluha,
  • R. Michael Gomez,
  • Ian Boyd,
  • Helen Neal,
  • Douglas Ray Allen,
  • Alyn Lambert,
  • Nathaniel J Livesey
Gerald E. Nedoluha
Naval Research Laboratory

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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R. Michael Gomez
Naval Research Laboratory
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Ian Boyd
Bryan Scientific Consulting
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Helen Neal
Bryan Scientific Consulting
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Douglas Ray Allen
Naval Research Lab
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Alyn Lambert
Jet Propulsion Lab (NASA)
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Nathaniel J Livesey
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
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Abstract

The eruption of Hunga Tonga in January 2022 injected an amount of water vapor into the stratosphere that is unprecedented in the satellite era. In the ensuing months Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) measurements showed that this plume of water vapor spread from its original injection site at 20.5⁰S to Mauna Loa, Hawaii at 19.5⁰N, where an increase was observed in April by the ground-based Water Vapor Millimeter-wave Spectrometer (WVMS) instruments. Interannual variations in water vapor occur over Mauna Loa due to both dynamical variations in the tropical stratosphere and variations in the amount of water vapor crossing the tropical tropopause, and we place the observed stratospheric water vapor increase from Hunga Tonga into context of these other variations that have been observed since 2013.