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Ionospheric Disturbances generated by the 2015 Calbuco Eruption: Comparison of GITM-R simulations with GNSS observations

Justin Tyska, University of Texas at Arlington
Yue Deng, University of Texas at Arlington
Shunrong Zhang, MIT Haystack Observatory
Cissi Lin, National Central University
First Author's Affiliation
University of Texas at Arlington
Abstract text:

Volcanic eruptions provide broad spectral forcing to the atmosphere and can create disturbances in the ionosphere-thermosphere (IT) system by propagation of the developed acoustic-gravity waves (AGWs). These disturbances can be observed by Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) and used to analyze various properties of the initial perturbation such as localization [1], wavelength [2], and total energy content [3]. The focus of this study is to simulate ionospheric Total Electron Content (TEC) variations induced by the first phase of the 2015 Calbuco volcanic eruption using a global circulation model and to subsequently compare the simulated results to GNSS data. Simulations using the Global Ionosphere-Thermosphere Model with local mesh refinement (GITM-R) are performed to capture mesoscale AGWs in the regions near the volcano [4]. Because GITM’s lower boundary is at ~100 km altitude, a spectral AGW propagation model is used in conjunction with a volcanic source model to specify the perturbation at GITM’s lower boundary. Two different specifications on the propagation model are applied, (1) direct propagation [5] and (2) ground-coupled propagation [6]. The simulated TEC variations for both specifications are compared to GNSS data to demonstrate GITM’s ability to resolve mesoscale acoustic-gravity wave signals induced by volcanic eruptions and examine the impact of considering ground-coupled airwaves on the simulated TEC variations.

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Poster category
COUP - Coupling of the Upper Atmosphere with Lower Altitudes