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Concession: I could not figure out how to change the font size for the Wiki Page and thus I apologize if my image captions are difficult to spot.

I will research the 2010 eruption of the Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajokull in order to simulate its ash dispersal using HYSPLIT. By simulating the ash dispersal during different times of the year I hope to determine how the ash dispersal varies with different atmospheric circulation patterns–both by season and by week. 

Eyjafjallajokull Background Info

CountryLatitudeLongitudeElevationEruption DateVEI (0-7)Erupted Material Mass
Iceland63.633 degrees North19.633 degrees West1651 mApril 14, 201034.8±1.2·10^11 kg 

Despite its moderate ranking on the VEI (Volcanic Explosively Index) given its max plume height and magma discharge, Eyjafjallajokull caused significant ash dispersal. 80% of the erupted material comprised of airborne ash, and the ash dispersed over an area of approximately 7 million km^2 in Europe and the North Atlantic. While 50% of the ash fell in Iceland, .02% reached mainland Europe. 

The ash caused great trouble to Europe and led to the closure of UK airspace from April 15th through 20th, for finer ash particles clogged airplane engines. 

Plume Height

Image 1: Shows the plume height of the ash from the Eyjafjallajokul eruption. The average plume height is 7.3 km (approximately 2/3rds of the height of the troposphere). 

While the plume height ranged from 3 to 10 km, we will simulate Eyjafjallajokul using its average plume height of 7.3 km. 

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

Ash Dispersal

Image 2: Shows the ash dispersal from Eyjafjallajokul on April 19th, 2010. The ash went so far as to reach mainland Europe and cover a significant portion of the United Kingdom. 

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

HYSPLIT Simulations for Eyjafjallajokull (Varying Eruption Date)

Although the eruptions contributing to the majority of ash fall lasted for 6 days, the simulations will cover the first three days of eruptions. 

April 14-16, 2010

First we will simulate the eruption on its actual eruption date of April 14th. 

 

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. reaches eastward regions.

April 7-9, 2010

Image 5: 3-day ash dispersal simulation for Eyjafjallajokull for eruption date of April 7, 2010, a week earlier from its actual eruption date. 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. As opposed to the dispersal for the prior week, part of the northward plume was swept into the polar regime. In contrast to what we would expect from theoretical predictions, the plume in the polar region moved clockwise when due to the coriolis force in the northern hemisphere, we would have anticipated it to move cyclonically. 

wraps around pole. reaches europe

January 1-3, 2010

Immediately moves anticyclonically in conflict with what theory would predict about the mean flow near the north pole where the Earth's rotation has a strong influence. Additionally, the plume that moves southward deflects to the east rather than the west as the right-ward deflection from the coriolis force would predict. 


January 8-10, 2010

ultimately plume moves towards pole both in cyclonic and anticyclonic spirals 

July 1-3, 2010

northward and anti-cyclonically 


July 8-10, 2010

moves poleward cyclonically. 

Conclusions

By simulating Eyjafjallajokull for various eruption dates, I sought to investigate how the circulation patterns changed both seasonally and weekly and whether the seasonal versus weakly variations dominated the ash dispersal patterns. Simulations showed that the weekly changes in atmospheric circulation patterns dominated any seasonal trends. Eyjafjallajokull sits at the boundary between two different air masses (between the polar and eddy regimes--air nearer to the poles is generally cold and dry whereas at mid-latitudes it is warmer and also influenced by the tropics). This region is influenced by the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) phenomenon in which the circulation patterns vary dramatically. 

The pronounced weekly variation in the ash dispersal may result from the varying eddies that pass by the region of the volcano. The eddies are mesoscale (order of 1000 km), and thus which eddy occupies the region during the eruption would likely function as the main determinant of the ashes' dispersal. Moreover, the local variance has significant downstream effects. In simulation for the eruption on January 1, 2010, the ash reached the U.S. whereas in the simulation a week later on January 8, 2010, the ash reached Russia.

Our simulations also give us insights into our record of past volcanoes. We often research past volcanoes through the ash they deposited in Greenland ice cores. Given that in many of our simulations the ash from our Icelandic volcano did not reach its neighboring country, we may likely lack recordings for many past local volcanoes. 

Next Steps

In order to understand the smallest time period over which changing the eruption date would cause the ash dispersal to vary, one must look into the time scales of the eddys in the Icelandic region. Further simulations should explore variations in dispersal from daily changes to the eruption date.

 

 

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