Man Mei Chim

and 3 more

Episodic volcanic eruptions are often either not considered in future climate projections, or represented in terms of a constant volcanic forcing. This conventional representation of volcanic eruptions in climate models does not account for how climate change might affect the dynamics of volcanic plumes and the stratospheric sulfate aerosol lifecycle and, ultimately, volcanic radiative forcing. The height of eruptive plumes is indeed sensitive to atmospheric conditions such as stratification and the strength of wind. In addition, climate change will affect tropopause height, the Brewer Dobson circulation and stratospheric temperatures which all govern volcanic sulfate aerosol cycle. A recent study showed that for tropical eruptions, these changes would either lead to a dampening or an amplification of volcanic forcing depending on the eruption intensity. In this study, to account for volcano-climate interactions in future climate projections, we present a new modelling approach through coupling a 1-D plume-rise model (Plumeria) with an Earth System model (UKESM). In this approach, each time a volcanic eruption of prescribed intensity (i.e., mass eruption rate) and SO2 mass occur, atmospheric conditions simulated by UKESM are passed interactively to Plumeria which then computes the corresponding height of eruptive plumes. Volcanic SO2 is then injected at the same height in UKESM stratospheric aerosol module. With this new methodology, plume heights are consistent with the climate conditions simulated by UKESM. Our study thus represents a first attempt to consider the impacts of climate change on volcanic eruptions in an Earth System model, which allows us to better evaluate the climate impacts of volcanoes under global warming.

Graham Mann

and 18 more

The widespread presence of meteoric smoke particles (MSPs) within a distinct class of stratospheric aerosol particles has become clear from in-situ measurements in the Arctic, Antarctic and at mid-latitudes. We apply an adapted version of the interactive stratosphere aerosol configuration of the composition-climate model UM-UKCA, to predict the global distribution of meteoric-sulphuric particles nucleated heterogeneously on MSP cores. We compare the UM-UKCA results to new MSP-sulphuric simulations with the European stratosphere-troposphere chemistry-aerosol modelling system IFS-CB05-BASCOE-GLOMAP. The simulations show a strong seasonal cycle in meteoric-sulphuric particle abundance results from the winter-time source of MSPs transported down into the stratosphere in the polar vortex. Coagulation during downward transport sees high latitude MSP concentrations reduce from ~500 per cm3 at 40km to ~20 per cm3 at 25km, the uppermost extent of the stratospheric aerosol particle layer (the Junge layer). Once within the Junge layer’s supersaturated environment, meteoric-sulphuric particles form readily on the MSP cores, growing to 50-70nm dry-diameter (Dp) at 20-25km. Further inter-particle coagulation between these non-volatile particles reduces their number to 1-5 per cc at 15-20km, particle sizes there larger, at Dp ~100nm. The model predicts meteoric-sulphurics in high-latitude winter comprise >90% of Dp > 10nm particles above 25km, reducing to ~40% at 20km, and ~10% at 15km. These non-volatile particle fractions are slightly less than measured from high-altitude aircraft in the lowermost Arctic stratosphere (Curtius et al., 2005; Weigel et al., 2014), and consistent with mid-latitude aircraft measurements of lower stratospheric aerosol composition (Murphy et al., 1998), total particle concentrations also matching in-situ balloon measurements from Wyoming (Campbell and Deshler, 2014). The MSP-sulphuric interactions also improve agreement with SAGE-II observed stratospheric aerosol extinction in the quiescent 1998-2002 period. Simulations with a factor-8-elevated MSP input form more Dp>10nm meteoric-sulphurics, but the increased number sees fewer growing to Dp ~100nm, the increased MSPs reducing the stratospheric aerosol layer’s light extinction.