Volcanic Impact of Nishinoshima Eruptions in Summer 2020 on the Atmosphere over Central Japan: Results from Airborne Measurements of Aerosol and Trace Gases

Aerosol number concentrations and trace gases (SO2, O3, HCHO, and H2O2) were measured over Imizu City, Toyama Prefecture, Japan on 5 August 2020, from a helicopter. The concentrations of fine particles (0.3-0.5 μm) were high at ground level and at an altitude of approximately 1200 m due to the volca...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inSOLA Vol. 17; pp. 109 - 112
Main Authors Watanabe, Koichi, Yang, Liu, Nakamura, Satoru, Otani, Takuya, Mori, Kenzaburo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Meteorological Society of Japan 2021
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Summary:Aerosol number concentrations and trace gases (SO2, O3, HCHO, and H2O2) were measured over Imizu City, Toyama Prefecture, Japan on 5 August 2020, from a helicopter. The concentrations of fine particles (0.3-0.5 μm) were high at ground level and at an altitude of approximately 1200 m due to the volcanic plume from Nishinoshima. However, concentrations of aerosol particles were low at an altitude of approximately 2400 m. The volcanic plume did not significantly affect the lower free troposphere. High concentrations of SO2 were also observed. The H2O2 concentrations (0.27-0.56 ppb) were much lower than those during previous observations in the summer (2.0-6.7 ppb) and significantly lower than the SO2 concentrations (1.8-3.3 ppb). The concentrations of HCHO (2.1-2.5 ppb) were higher than those of H2O2. The oxidation of S(IV) to H2SO4 in cloud water might have been suppressed over the studied area.
ISSN:1349-6476
1349-6476
DOI:10.2151/sola.2021-017