You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 16 Next »

I will simulate the ash dispersal from Eyjafjallajokull using HYSPLIT. By simulating the ash dispersal during different times in the year I hope to determine the ash dispersal variation given different atmospheric circulation patterns. 

Eyjafjallajokull Background Info

CountryLatitudeLongitudeElevationEruption Date
Iceland63.633 degrees North19.633 degrees West1651 mApril 14, 2010

Plume Height

Image 1: 

Source: NASA, https://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/iceland-volcano-plume-archive1.html

Ash Dispersal

Image 2: 

Source: NASA, https://www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/iceland-volcano-plume-archive1.html

HYSPLIT Simulations for Eyjafjallajokull (Varying Eruption Date)

April 14-16, 2010

Image 3: 3-day ash dispersal simulation for Eyjafjallajokull for actual eruption date of April 14, 2010. The plume initially moves north-eastward and then south-westard. As the plume moves northward it deflects to the east and as it moves southward it deflects to the west as predicted by the rightward deflection of the coriolis force in the northern hemisphere. The two layers closest to the Earth's surface spread the furthest. 

Image 4: 3-day Ash dispersal by arrival time for Eyjafjallajokull for actual eruption date of April 14, 2010. Shows that the plume either moves northeastward or southwestward. 

April 7-9, 2010



January 1-3, 2010


January 8-10, 2010

 

July 1-3, 2010



July 8-10, 2010



 

  • No labels