Traditionally, tephra transport and dispersal models have evolved decoupled
(offline) from numerical weather prediction models. There is a concern that
inconsistencies and shortcomings associated with this coupling strategy might
lead to errors in the ash cloud forecast. Despite this concern and the
significant progress in improving the accuracy of tephra dispersal models in
the aftermath of the 2010 Eyjafjallajökull and 2011 Cordón Caulle
eruptions, to date, no operational online dispersal model is available to
forecast volcanic ash. Here, we describe and evaluate NMMB-MONARCH-ASH, a
new online multi-scale meteorological and transport model that attempts to
pioneer the forecast of volcanic aerosols at operational level. The model
forecasts volcanic ash cloud trajectories, concentration of ash at relevant
flight levels, and the expected deposit thickness for both regional and
global configurations. Its online coupling approach improves the current
state-of-the-art tephra dispersal models, especially in situations where
meteorological conditions are changing rapidly in time, two-way feedbacks
are significant, or distal ash cloud dispersal simulations are required.
This work presents the model application for the first phases of the
2011 Cordón Caulle and 2001 Mount Etna eruptions. The computational efficiency
of NMMB-MONARCH-ASH and its application results compare favorably with other
long-range tephra dispersal models, supporting its operational implementation
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