Science
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A massive underwater volcanic eruption in January this year in the South Pacific ocean may temporarily affect Earth's climatic patterns, a study has found.
Tonga volcanic eruption
The Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano, which erupted on 15 January this year, sent a Tsunami racing around the world and set off a sonic boom that circled the globe twice.
The underwater eruption in the South Pacific Ocean also blasted an enormous plume of water vapour into Earth’s stratosphere – enough to fill more than 58,000 Olympic-size swimming pools.
How the Tonga volcanic eruption could affect Earth's temperature
The sheer amount of water vapourr released in the volcanic eruption could be enough to temporarily affect Earth’s global average temperature.
According to NASA, the water vapour released in the volcanic eruption could end up temporarily warming Earth’s surface.
What's unprecedented about Tonga volcanic eruption
Volcanic eruptions rarely inject much water into the stratosphere. In the 18 years that NASA has been taking measurements, only two other eruptions - the 2008 Kasatochi event in Alaska and the 2015 Calbuco eruption in Chile – sent appreciable amounts of water vapour to such high altitudes.
But those were mere blips compared to the Tonga event, and the water vapor from both previous eruptions dissipated quickly. The excess water vapor injected by the Tonga volcano, on the other hand, could remain in the stratosphere for several years.
This extra water vapor could influence atmospheric chemistry, boosting certain chemical reactions that could temporarily worsen depletion of the ozone layer. It could also influence surface temperatures.
Warming effect due to Tonga volcanic eruption may dissipate in time
Massive volcanic eruptions like Krakatoa and Mount Pinatubo typically cool Earth’s surface by ejecting gases, dust, and ash that reflect sunlight back into space. In contrast, the Tonga volcano didn’t inject large amounts of aerosols into the stratosphere, and the huge amounts of water vapor from the eruption may have a small, temporary warming effect, since water vapor traps heat.
Right depth in ocean
The sheer amount of water injected into the stratosphere was likely only possible because the underwater volcano’s caldera – a basin-shaped depression usually formed after magma erupts or drains from a shallow chamber beneath the volcano – was at just the right depth in the ocean: about 490 feet (150 meters) down.
Any shallower, and there wouldn’t have been enough seawater superheated by the erupting magma to account for the stratospheric water vapour values observed by a team of NASA researchers, and any deeper, and the immense pressures in the ocean’s depths could have muted the eruption.
146 Teragrams of water vapour injected into stratosphere
“We’ve never seen anything like it,” said Luis Millán, an atmospheric scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California.
He led a new study examining the amount of water vapor that the Tonga volcano injected into the stratosphere, the layer of the atmosphere between about 12 and 53 kilometers above Earth’s surface.
In the study, published in Geophysical Research Letters, Millán and his colleagues estimate that the Tonga eruption sent around 146 teragrams (1 teragram equals a trillion grams) of water vapour into Earth’s stratosphere – equal to 10 per cent of the water already present in that atmospheric layer.
That’s nearly four times the amount of water vapor that scientists estimate the 1991 Mount Pinatubo eruption in the Philippines lofted into the stratosphere.
Millán analyzed data from the Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) instrument on NASA’s Aura satellite, which measures atmospheric gases, including water vapor and ozone.
After the Tonga volcano erupted, the MLS team started seeing water vapor readings that were off the charts.
“We had to carefully inspect all the measurements in the plume to make sure they were trustworthy,” said Millán.
The MLS instrument was well situated to detect this water vapor plume because it observes natural microwave signals emitted from Earth’s atmosphere. Measuring these signals enables MLS to “see” through obstacles like ash clouds that can blind other instruments measuring water vapor in the stratosphere.
“MLS was the only instrument with dense enough coverage to capture the water vapor plume as it happened, and the only one that wasn’t affected by the ash that the volcano released,” said Millán.