The irradiation of ruthenium-sulfur dioxide complexes of general formula trans-[Ru(II)(NH(3))(4)(SO(2))X]Y with laser light at low temperature results in linkage isomerization of SO(2), starting with eta(1)-planar S-bound to eta(2)-side S,O-bound SO(2). The solid-state photoreaction proceeds with retention of sample crystallinity. Following work on trans-[Ru(NH(3))(4)Cl(eta(1)-SO(2))]Cl and trans-[Ru(NH(3))(4)(H(2)O)(eta(1)-SO2)](C(6)H(5)SO(3))(2) (Kovalevsky, A. Y.; Bagley, K. A.; Coppens, P. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2002, 124, 9241-9248), we describe photocrystallographic, IR, DSC, and theoretical studies of trans-[Ru(II)(NH(3))(4)(SO(2))X]Y complexes with (X = Cl(-), H(2)O, or CF(3)COO(-) (TFA(-))) and a number of different counterions (Y = Cl(-), C(6)H(5)SO(3)(-), Tos(-), or TFA(-)). Low temperature IR experiments indicate the frequency of the asymmetric and symmetric stretching vibrations of the Ru-coordinated SO(2) to be downshifted by about 100 and 165 cm(-1), respectively. Variation of the trans-to-SO(2) ligand and the counterion increases the MS2 decay temperature from 230 K (trans-[Ru(II)(NH(3))(4)(SO(2))Cl]Cl) to 276 K (trans-[Ru(II)(NH(3))(4)(SO(2))(H(2)O)](Tos)(2)). The stability of the MS2 state correlates with increasing sigma-donating ability of the trans ligand and the size of the counterion. Quantum chemical DFT calculations indicate the existence of a third eta(1)-O-bound (MS1) isomer, the two metastable states being 0.1-0.6 eV above the energy of the ground-state complex.