Australian Government - Antarctic Division Skip navigation
Australian Antarctic Division
Antarctica - Valued, Protected, Understood

  »  Aerial whale research
  »  Tracking emperor penguin chicks
  »  Phytoplankton let us breathe...
  »  Dr Tas van Ommen
  »  Illuminating mysteries of the microscopic world
  »  Darkness sheds light on krill reproduction
  »  Gunning for science
  »  Under the Amery Ice Shelf
  »  Sub-Antarctic penguins infected with tick-borne viruses
  »  National Science Week 2009
  »  Mid-winter light show in Antarctica
  »  Krill Cam brings live krill to your computer
  »  Ice sheets, sea ice and sea level rise: the facts.
  »  Rare 'mother-of-pearl' clouds sighted in Antarctica
  »  Bushfire Smoke reaches Davis Station
  »  Celebrating 50 years of cooperation
  »  A virus amongst the penguins
  »  Krill mix up the ocean
  »  Carbon dioxide raises the dead zone
  »  Developing ocean acidification policy
  »  International Polar Day - Above the Polar Regions
  »  International Polar Year update
  »  Archive

Bushfire Smoke reaches Davis Station

The devastating Victorian bushfires in February have produced unprecedented effects on the atmosphere of the Southern Hemisphere.

As revealed by satellite measurements, smoke from the fires penetrated into the stratosphere and dispersed over a wide geographical area. This phenomenon was captured by NASA's CALIPSO (Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observation).

Since late February, AAD's atmospheric LIDAR (LIght Detection And Ranging) instrument at Davis Station has detected the smoke between altitudes of 14 km and 20 km.

The image below shows thin layers in the lower stratosphere that were illuminated by the LIDAR's green laser beam.  

Image of LIDAR measurements from Davis Station on 19 April 2009

The smoke layer has also been detected by LIDAR instruments in Brazil and at Dumont d'Urville in Antarctica.

LIDAR beam and aurora over Davis Station
LIDAR beam and aurora over Davis Station
Photo: Simon Alexander
LIDAR beam and aurora over Davis Station
LIDAR beam and aurora over Davis Station
Photo: Simon Alexander

What are the impacts of the smoke layer?

Together with collaborators at the US Naval Research Laboratory and other LIDAR sites, scientists and researchers from AAD's Ice Oceans Atmosphere and Climate (IOAC) section are gathering data on the layer to understand its dispersal and climate effects.

The smoke particles act as nucleation sites promoting the growth of sulphuric acid droplets. These droplets are likely to have a small effect on the climate at high altitudes, either by warming or cooling the atmosphere (which depends on the size of the droplets), and by producing chemical reactions that will ultimately result in loss of stratospheric ozone.