Abstract
Volcanic activity occurring in tropical moist atmospheres can promote
deep convection and trigger volcanic thunderstorms. Intense heating at
ground surface and entrainment of moist air generates positive buoyancy,
rapidly transporting volcanic gases and ash particles up to the
tropopause and beyond. Volcanically-induced deep convection, however, is
rarely observed to last continuously for more than a day and so insights
into the dynamics, microphysics and electrification processes are
limited. Here we present a multidisciplinary study on an extreme case,
where this phenomenon lasted for six days. We show that this
unprecedented event was triggered and sustained by phreatomagmatic
activity at Anak Krakatau volcano, Indonesia from 22-28 December 2018.
During this period, a deep convective plume formed over the volcano and
acted as a ‘volcanic freezer’ producing ~3 × 10⁹ kg of
ice on average with maxima reaching ~10¹⁰ kg. Our
satellite analyses reveal that the convective anvil cloud, reaching
16-18 km above sea level, was ice-rich and ash-poor. Cloud-top
temperatures hovered around -80 °C and ice particles produced in the
anvil were notably small (effective radius from 20-30 μm). Our modelling
suggests that ice particles began to form above 5 km and experienced
vigorous updrafts (>30 m/s). These findings explain the
impressive number of lightning strikes (~100,000)
recorded near the volcano during this time. Our results, together with
the unique dataset we have compiled, provide new insights into volcanic
and meteorological thunderstorms alike.