New advances in dial-lidar-based remote sensing of the volcanic CO2 flux
- Authors: Aiuppa, A.; Fiorani, L.; Santoro, S.; Parracino, S.; D'Aleo, R.; Liuzzo, M.; Maio, G.; Nuvoli, M.
- Publication year: 2017
- Type: Articolo in rivista (Articolo in rivista)
- Key words: CO; 2; flux; DIAL-lidar; Remote sensing; Stromboli; Volcanic CO; 2;
- OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/251169
Abstract
We report here on the results of a proof-of-concept study aimed at remotely sensing the volcanic CO2 flux using a Differential Adsorption lidar (DIAL-lidar). The observations we report on were conducted in June 2014 on Stromboli volcano, where our lidar (LIght Detection And Ranging) was used to scan the volcanic plume at ∼3km distance from the summit vents. The obtained results prove that a remotely operating lidar can resolve a volcanic CO2 signal of a few tens of ppm (in excess to background air) over km-long optical paths. We combine these results with independent estimates of plume transport speed (from processing of UV Camera images) to derive volcanic CO2 flux time-series of ≈16–33min temporal resolution. Our lidar-based CO2 fluxes range from 1.8 ± 0.5 to 32.1 ±8.0kg/s, and constrain the daily averaged CO2 emissions fromStromboli at 8.3 ± 2.1 to 18.1 ± 4.5kg/s (or 718–1565 tons/day). These inferred fluxes fall within the range of earlier observations at Stromboli. They also agree well with contemporaneous CO2 flux determinations (8.4–20.1kg/s) obtained using a standard approach that combines Multi-GAS-based in-plume readings of the CO2 /SO2 ratio (≈8) with UV-camera sensed SO2 fluxes (1.5–3.4kg/s). We conclude that DIAL-lidars offer new prospects for safer (remote) instrumental observations of the volcanic CO2 flux.
