Paper
27 November 2012 Preliminary results of satellite and ground-based lidar observations for aerosol perturbations in Northern hemisphere stratosphere after Grimsvotn eruption, May 2011
Konstantin A. Shmirko, Andrey N. Pavlov, Sergey Yu. Stolyarchuk
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 8696, Eighteenth International Symposium on Atmospheric and Ocean Optics: Atmospheric Physics; 86960O (2012) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2014853
Event: Eighteenth International Symposium on Atmospheric and Ocean Optics: Atmospheric Physics, 2012, Irkutsk, Russian Federation
Abstract
In the report we present our study of volcano eruption products transportation in the Northern hemisphere stratosphere. In this investigation we use data from CALIPSO satellite and ground-based lidar at the Institute for automation and control processes. It is shown that most of aerosols are transported from north to medieval latitudes through polar and further subtropical jets. According to ground-based measurements it was found out that there was a permanent volcanogenic aerosol layer at the altitudes of 20 km from mid-June to mid-October, 2011.
© (2012) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Konstantin A. Shmirko, Andrey N. Pavlov, and Sergey Yu. Stolyarchuk "Preliminary results of satellite and ground-based lidar observations for aerosol perturbations in Northern hemisphere stratosphere after Grimsvotn eruption, May 2011", Proc. SPIE 8696, Eighteenth International Symposium on Atmospheric and Ocean Optics: Atmospheric Physics, 86960O (27 November 2012); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2014853
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KEYWORDS
Aerosols

Stratosphere

LIDAR

Backscatter

Satellites

Process control

Atmospheric optics

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