Eruption of the Sierra Negra volcano in the Galapagos
Onset of the #SierraNegra #eruption (#Galapagos) in the afternoon of June 26 captured by GOES & other satellites. The previous two Sierra Negra eruptions (1979 & 2005) both emitted a lot of SO2.
Source: @NOAA/@UWCIMSS volcanic cloud monitoring system; https://t.co/OZWmWBOVs9 pic.twitter.com/Gg3Yqw6pp3
— Simon Carn (@simoncarn) June 27, 2018
GOES-16 (GOES-East) “Clean” Infrared Window (10.3 µm), Mid-level Water Vapor (6.9 µm) and Low-level Water Vapor (7.3 µm) images beginning late in the day on 26 June 2018 (below) showed that a signature of the volcanic plume was evident in the 7.3 µm imagery for several hours after it was no longer seen in the 10.3 µm or 6.9 µm imagery — this is due to the fact that the 7.3 µm spectral band is also sensitive to SO2 absorption (and this volcanic eruption produced large amounts of SO2).
Gigantic volcanic sulfur dioxide plume from the #SierraNegra volcano on the #GalapagosIslands over the tropical eastern Pacific as seen by the #TROPOMI satellite instrument, 28 June 2018. Source ESA/BIRA/DLR/KNMI, preliminary TROPOMI SO2 data. pic.twitter.com/iRGQfRXv39
— Jos (@weerrecords) July 2, 2018