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Into the mesosphere: volcanic eruption in Tonga has produced the highest ash plume ever recorded on Earth

2022-11-04T10:48:06.353Z


Scientists had already suspected it, now they are certain: never was an ash cloud higher than during this year's volcanic eruption in Tonga. Ejected material broke through the stratosphere for the first time.


Enlarge image

Volcanic eruption in Tonga (pictured January 14)

Photo: Tonga Geological Services / dpa

A volcanic eruption in Tonga earlier this year produced the highest ash plume ever recorded on Earth.

At 57 kilometers, the eruption column even penetrated the third layer of the earth's atmosphere, the mesosphere.

The suspicion already existed – now researchers at the University of Oxford have confirmed it.

The submarine volcano Hunga-Tonga-Hunga-Ha'apai erupted in mid-January 2022 and threw a gigantic cloud of ash and gas kilometers high.

The research work, in which the Munich University of Applied Sciences was also involved, was published in the journal »Science«.

Tsunami waves to Japan and South America

The eruption triggered tsunami waves that even swept onto the coasts of Japan, Alaska and South America.

After the eruption, there was little information from the Polynesian island nation, which is 2,300 kilometers northeast of New Zealand, for days.

The kingdom of 107,000 people was covered in a thick layer of ash, which also polluted drinking water.

The Hunga-Tonga-Hunga-Ha'apai lies just 40 miles north of Tonga's capital, Nuku'alofa, beneath the surface of the sea.

So far, however, the scientists have lacked a method to precisely measure the height of the ash cloud, according to a statement.

The images taken by weather satellites every ten minutes, which documented the rapid changes in the cloud's trajectory, together with the phenomenon known as the parallax effect, would now have made this possible.

The results showed that the cloud reached a height of 57 kilometers.

"This is significantly higher than the previous record holders," say the researchers.

In 1991, the Pinatubo volcano in the Philippines threw up the highest known eruption column measured by satellite.

It was said to have reached a height of 40 kilometers.

The El Chichón cloud in Mexico rose about 31 kilometers in 1982.

The eruption of Hunga-Tonga-Hunga-Ha'apai is the first observable evidence of a volcanic eruption whose material was injected through the stratosphere into the mesosphere, it said.

This begins about 50 kilometers above the earth's surface.

"This is an extraordinary result as we have never seen such a high cloud of any kind before," said lead author Simon Proud from the University of Oxford.

In addition, due to the good satellite coverage, it is only now possible to calculate the height of an eruption column using the parallax method.

“That wouldn’t have been possible a decade ago.”

Co-author Andrew Prata said: "Other scientific questions we want to understand are: Why did the Tonga cloud rise so high?

What are the climatic effects of this eruption?

And what exactly was the cloud made of?”

ani/dpa

Source: spiegel

All tech articles on 2022-11-04

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