The Massive New Year 2020 pyroCb Event in Australia: Observations of Unprecedented Stratospheric Smoke
- Naval Research Laboratory, Washington DC, United States of America (mike.fromm@nrl.navy.mil)
The 2019/2020 fire season in Australia has been unusually energetic since early spring. In the last days of December and early January an unprecedented number of pyrocumulonimbus (pyroCb) storms erupted in New South Wales and Victoria, creating a seemingly unrivaled stratospheric smoke plume as well as devastation on the ground. Preliminary indications from satellite remote sensing are that the clustering of active pyroCbs and smoke injection heights exceeded all previous Australian pyroCb events, and perhaps pyroCb events worldwide. Similar to another extraordinary pyroCb event, the so-called Pacific Northwest Event in 2017, the Australian smoke plume has been observed to rise above its injection altitude by several kilometers. We report on the active blowups and quantify the impact on stratospheric composition using satellite remote sensing. Our analysis also consists of a quantitative comparison of the 2019/20 Australian pyrocb event with other major pyroCb events such as Black Saturday, Victoria, Australia in 2009. At the time of submission of this abstract, this is an unfolding episode; our report will characterize the unusual nature of this pyroCb event as the evolving plume and satellite remote sensing data permit.
How to cite: Fromm, M. and Kablick III, G.: The Massive New Year 2020 pyroCb Event in Australia: Observations of Unprecedented Stratospheric Smoke, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-20366, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-20366, 2020