5 research outputs found

    Characterization of Tajogaite volcanic plumes detected over the Iberian Peninsula from a set of satellite and ground-based remote sensing instrumentation

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    Three volcanic plumes were detected during the Tajogaite volcano eruptive activity (Canary Islands, Spain, September–December 2021) over the Iberian Peninsula. The spatiotemporal evolution of these events is characterised by combining passive satellite remote sensing and ground-based lidar and sun-photometer systems. The inversion algorithm GRASP is used with a suite of ground-based remote sensing instruments such as lidar/ceilometer and sun-photometer from eight sites at different locations throughout the Iberian Peninsula. Satellite observations showed that the volcanic ash plumes remained nearby the Canary Islands covering a mean area of 120 ± 202 km2 during the whole period of eruptive activity and that sulphur dioxide plumes reached the Iberian Peninsula. Remote sensing observations showed that the three events were mainly composed of sulphates, which were transported from the volcano into the free troposphere. The high backscatter-related Ångström exponents for wavelengths 532–1064 nm (1.17 ± 0.20 to 1.40 ± 0.24) and low particle depolarization ratios (0.08 ± 0.02 to 0.09 ± 0.02), measured by the multi-wavelength Raman lidar, hinted at the presence of spherical small particles. The layer aerosol optical depth at 532 nm (AODL532) obtained from lidar measurements contributed between 49% and 82% to the AERONET total column AOD at 532 nm in event II (11–13 October). According to the GRASP retrievals, the layer aerosol optical depth at 440 nm (AODL440) was higher in all sites during event II with values between 0.097 (Badajoz) and 0.233 (Guadiana-UGR) and lower in event III (19–21 October) varying between 0.003 (Granada) and 0.026 (Évora). Compared with the GRASP retrievals of total column AOD at 440 nm, the AODL440 had contributions between 21% and 52% during event II. In the event I (25–28 September), the mean volume concentrations (VC) varied between 5 ± 4 ÎŒm3cm−3 (El-Arenosillo/Huelva) and 17 ± 10 ÎŒm3cm−3 (Guadiana-UGR), while in event II this variation was from 11 ± 7 ÎŒm3cm−3 (Badajoz) to 27 ± 10 ÎŒm3cm−3 (Guadiana-UGR). Due to the impact of volcanic events on atmospheric and economic fields, such as radiative forcing and airspace security, a proper characterization is required. This work undertakes it using advanced instrumentation and methods.PROBE Cost Action - NASA Ra-diation Sciences Program and Earth Observing System UIDB/04683/2020National funds through FCT -Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia, I.P., in the framework of the ICT project UIDB/04683/2020 UIDP/04683/2020TOMA-QAPA PTDC/CTAMET/29678/2017GRASP-ACE 778349ACTRIS-IMP 871115ATMO-ACCESS 101008004PROBE CA18235HARMONIA CA21119EUMETNET through the E-PROFILE program and REALISTIC 101086690ACTRIS-2 654109Spanish Government PID2019-103886RB-I00/AEI/10.13039/501100011033NTEGRATYON3 PID2020-117825GB-C21 PID2020-117825GB- C22ELPIS PID2020-120015RB-I00CLARIN CGL2016-81092-REPOLAAR RTI2018-097864-B-I00CAMELIA PID2019-104205GB- C21/AEI/10.13039/501100011033ACTRIS-Espa ~na CGL2017- 90884REDTUniversity of Granada Plan Propio through Singular Laboratory LS2022-1Andalusia Autonomous Government projects AEROPRE and ADAPNE P18-RT-3820 P20_00136UGR-FEDER projects DEM3TRIOS A-RNM-524-UGR20MOGATRACO UCE-PP2017-02Scientific Units of Excellence Program RTI 2018-097332-B-C22R+D+i grant MCIN/AEI/ 10.13039/ 501100011033ERDF A Way of Doing EuropeINTA predoctoral contract program A-RNM-430-UGR2

    Characterization of Tajogaite volcanic plumes detected over the Iberian Peninsula from a set of satellite and ground-based remote sensing instrumentation

    Get PDF
    Three volcanic plumes were detected during the Tajogaite volcano eruptive activity (Canary Islands, Spain, September–December 2021) over the Iberian Peninsula. The spatiotemporal evolution of these events is characterised by combining passive satellite remote sensing and ground-based lidar and sun-photometer systems. The inversion algorithm GRASP is used with a suite of ground-based remote sensing instruments such as lidar/ ceilometer and sun-photometer from eight sites at different locations throughout the Iberian Peninsula. Satellite observations showed that the volcanic ash plumes remained nearby the Canary Islands covering a mean area of 120 ± 202 km2 during the whole period of eruptive activity and that sulphur dioxide plumes reached the Iberian Peninsula

    Strategies towards digital and semi-automated curation in RegulonDB

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    Experimentally generated biological information needs to be organized and structured in order to become meaningful knowledge. However, the rate at which new information is being published makes manual curation increasingly unable to cope. Devising new curation strategies that leverage upon data mining and text analysis is, therefore, a promising avenue to help life science databases to cope with the deluge of novel information. In this article, we describe the integration of text mining technologies in the curation pipeline of the RegulonDB database, and discuss how the process can enhance the productivity of the curators. Specifically, a named entity recognition approach is used to pre-annotate terms referring to a set of domain entities which are potentially relevant for the curation process. The annotated documents are presented to the curator, who, thanks to a custom-designed interface, can select sentences containing specific types of entities, thus restricting the amount of text that needs to be inspected. Additionally, a module capable of computing semantic similarity between sentences across the entire collection of articles to be curated is being integrated in the system. We tested the module using three sets of scientific articles and six domain experts. All these improvements are gradually enabling us to obtain a high throughput curation process with the same quality as manual curation
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