EGU22-10645, updated on 28 Mar 2022
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-10645
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

The global reach of gravity waves at the stratospheric speed limit from the 2022 Hunga Tonga volcanic eruption

Neil Hindley1, Lars Hoffmann2, M. Joan Alexander3, Cathryn Mitchell1, Scott Osprey4, Cora Randall5, Corwin Wright1, and Jia Yue6
Neil Hindley et al.
  • 1Centre for Space Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, University of Bath, Bath, UK
  • 2Forschungszentrum Juelich, Juelich Supercomputing Centre, Juelich, Germany
  • 3Northwest Research Associates, Boulder, CO, USA
  • 4Atmospheric Oceanic and Planetary Physics, University of Oxford, UK
  • 5Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, Boulder, CO, USA
  • 6NASA Goddard Spaceflight Centre, Greenbelt, MD, USA

At around 04:14 UTC on the 15th January 2022, a major volcanic eruption began beneath the Tongan islands of Hunga Tonga and Hunga Ha’apai (175.4W, 20.5S). Located under only a shallow depth of water, the volcano rapidly launched a plume of super-heated ash and vapourised water upwards into the atmosphere. Over the next few hours, satellite observations reveal unprecedented large-scale concentric waves in the mid-stratosphere (near 40km altitude) radiating away from the eruption across the entire Pacific Ocean. In this presentation, we show brightness temperature perturbations in the 4.3 micron bands of the AIRS/Aqua, CrIS/Suomi-NPP and CrIS/JPSS-1 instruments that reveal three groups of atmospheric waves of special interest. First, an initial concentric wave is found travelling near the stratospheric speed of sound, likely to be an acoustic compression wave. There then follows a gap, which corresponds to phase speeds not permitted by theory, then a second group of waves likely to be gravity waves. These gravity waves are shown to be travelling near the maximum phase speed permitted, and there is a suggestion that some may travel the whole way around the globe in the tropics. Third, we observe small-scale gravity waves that pervade many thousands of kilometres across almost the entire Pacific Ocean, suggesting an extremely consistent heating source. All three of these wave observations are unprecedented in more than 20 years of stratospheric satellite observations, and this eruption may potentially have produced the first observations of an acoustic wave in the mid-stratosphere that can be measured from space. Now that we have space-borne instruments to observe it, this volcanic eruption provides a unique test of theoretical predictions of atmospheric wave phase speeds on some of the largest scales possible.

How to cite: Hindley, N., Hoffmann, L., Alexander, M. J., Mitchell, C., Osprey, S., Randall, C., Wright, C., and Yue, J.: The global reach of gravity waves at the stratospheric speed limit from the 2022 Hunga Tonga volcanic eruption, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-10645, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-10645, 2022.