Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Calculating and communicating ensemble-based vo...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Calculating and communicating ensemble-based volcanic ash concentration risk for aviation

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Abstract

Published

Standard

Calculating and communicating ensemble-based volcanic ash concentration risk for aviation. / Harvey, Natalie; Dacre, Helen; Capponi, Antonio.
2021. Abstract from EGU General Assembly 2021.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Abstract

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Harvey N, Dacre H, Capponi A. Calculating and communicating ensemble-based volcanic ash concentration risk for aviation. 2021. Abstract from EGU General Assembly 2021. doi: 10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2718

Author

Harvey, Natalie ; Dacre, Helen ; Capponi, Antonio. / Calculating and communicating ensemble-based volcanic ash concentration risk for aviation. Abstract from EGU General Assembly 2021.

Bibtex

@conference{8c33ddb1ffb04907ae6d7e79dc9067fa,
title = "Calculating and communicating ensemble-based volcanic ash concentration risk for aviation",
abstract = "During volcanic eruptions Volcanic Ash Advisory Centers (VAAC) produce forecasts of ash location and concentration. However, these forecasts are deterministic and do not take into account the inherent uncertainty in the forecasts due to incomplete knowledge of the volcano{\textquoteright}s eruption characteristics and imperfect representation of atmospheric processes in numerical models. This means flight operators have incomplete information regarding the risk of flying following an eruption, which could result in overly conservative decisions being made. There is a need for a new generation of volcanic ash hazard charts allowing end users to make fast and robust decisions using risk estimates based on state-of-the-art probabilistic forecast methods . In this presentation, a method for visualizing ash concentration matrix using a risk-matrix approach will be applied to two volcanic eruptions, Grimsvotn (2011) and Raikoke (2019). These risk-matrix graphics reduce the ensemble information into an easy-to-use decision-making tool. In this work the risk level is determined by combining the concentration of volcanic ash and the likelihood of that concentration occurring. When applying this technique to the Grimsvotn eruption, the airspace containing volcanic ash concentrations deemed to be associated with the highest risk (high likelihood of exceeding a high concentration threshold) to aviation are reduced by over 85% compared to using an ensemble that gives an ash distribution similar to the VAAC issued deterministic forecast. The reduction during the Raikoke eruption can be as much as 40% at a forecast lead time of 48 hours. This has the potential to reduce the disruption to airline operations. This tool could be extended to include other aviation hazards, such as desert dust, aircraft icing and clear air turbulence.",
author = "Natalie Harvey and Helen Dacre and Antonio Capponi",
year = "2021",
month = mar,
day = "3",
doi = "10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2718",
language = "English",
note = "EGU General Assembly 2021 ; Conference date: 19-04-2021 Through 30-04-2021",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Calculating and communicating ensemble-based volcanic ash concentration risk for aviation

AU - Harvey, Natalie

AU - Dacre, Helen

AU - Capponi, Antonio

PY - 2021/3/3

Y1 - 2021/3/3

N2 - During volcanic eruptions Volcanic Ash Advisory Centers (VAAC) produce forecasts of ash location and concentration. However, these forecasts are deterministic and do not take into account the inherent uncertainty in the forecasts due to incomplete knowledge of the volcano’s eruption characteristics and imperfect representation of atmospheric processes in numerical models. This means flight operators have incomplete information regarding the risk of flying following an eruption, which could result in overly conservative decisions being made. There is a need for a new generation of volcanic ash hazard charts allowing end users to make fast and robust decisions using risk estimates based on state-of-the-art probabilistic forecast methods . In this presentation, a method for visualizing ash concentration matrix using a risk-matrix approach will be applied to two volcanic eruptions, Grimsvotn (2011) and Raikoke (2019). These risk-matrix graphics reduce the ensemble information into an easy-to-use decision-making tool. In this work the risk level is determined by combining the concentration of volcanic ash and the likelihood of that concentration occurring. When applying this technique to the Grimsvotn eruption, the airspace containing volcanic ash concentrations deemed to be associated with the highest risk (high likelihood of exceeding a high concentration threshold) to aviation are reduced by over 85% compared to using an ensemble that gives an ash distribution similar to the VAAC issued deterministic forecast. The reduction during the Raikoke eruption can be as much as 40% at a forecast lead time of 48 hours. This has the potential to reduce the disruption to airline operations. This tool could be extended to include other aviation hazards, such as desert dust, aircraft icing and clear air turbulence.

AB - During volcanic eruptions Volcanic Ash Advisory Centers (VAAC) produce forecasts of ash location and concentration. However, these forecasts are deterministic and do not take into account the inherent uncertainty in the forecasts due to incomplete knowledge of the volcano’s eruption characteristics and imperfect representation of atmospheric processes in numerical models. This means flight operators have incomplete information regarding the risk of flying following an eruption, which could result in overly conservative decisions being made. There is a need for a new generation of volcanic ash hazard charts allowing end users to make fast and robust decisions using risk estimates based on state-of-the-art probabilistic forecast methods . In this presentation, a method for visualizing ash concentration matrix using a risk-matrix approach will be applied to two volcanic eruptions, Grimsvotn (2011) and Raikoke (2019). These risk-matrix graphics reduce the ensemble information into an easy-to-use decision-making tool. In this work the risk level is determined by combining the concentration of volcanic ash and the likelihood of that concentration occurring. When applying this technique to the Grimsvotn eruption, the airspace containing volcanic ash concentrations deemed to be associated with the highest risk (high likelihood of exceeding a high concentration threshold) to aviation are reduced by over 85% compared to using an ensemble that gives an ash distribution similar to the VAAC issued deterministic forecast. The reduction during the Raikoke eruption can be as much as 40% at a forecast lead time of 48 hours. This has the potential to reduce the disruption to airline operations. This tool could be extended to include other aviation hazards, such as desert dust, aircraft icing and clear air turbulence.

U2 - 10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2718

DO - 10.5194/egusphere-egu21-2718

M3 - Abstract

T2 - EGU General Assembly 2021

Y2 - 19 April 2021 through 30 April 2021

ER -