Observation of El Chichon volcanic aerosols by the solar backscattered ultraviolet (SBUV) experiment
Abstract
The Solar Backscatter Ultraviolet Experiment (SBUV) aboard the Nimbus-7 satellite identified large amounts of SO2 in the tropical stratosphere on April 15, 1982, 11 days after major eruption of the El Chichon volcano in southern Mexico. It is shown in the present study that the backscattered ultraviolet radiances measured by the SBUV experiment have been strongly affected by the presence of stratospheric volcanic cloud from the El Chichon eruptions. Both SO2 and aerosol amounts present in the volcanic cloud have been mapped on the basis of an analysis of the radiances measured by the SBUV and TOMS (Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer) experiments. It is estimated that a volcanic cloud of optical depths as small as 0.03 can be detected using SBUV, provided the cloud reaches the middle atmosphere. Lower-altitude clouds have progressively smaller effects on the radiances as well as on the ozone profile derived from them and are therefore harder to detect.
- Publication:
-
5th Conference on Atmospheric Radiation
- Pub Date:
- 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983atra.conf..357B
- Keywords:
-
- Aerosols;
- Air Pollution;
- Solar Backscatter Uv Spectrometer;
- Stratosphere;
- Ultraviolet Radiation;
- Volcanoes;
- Backscattering;
- Dust;
- Mexico;
- Nimbus 7 Satellite;
- Ozone;
- Radiance;
- Sulfur Dioxides;
- Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer;
- Tropical Regions;
- Geophysics