6533b82dfe1ef96bd1291b6d

RESEARCH PRODUCT

BLAST WAVES AT YASUR VOLCANO

E. MarchettiM. RipepeD. Delle DonneR. GencoA. FinizolaE. Garaebiti

subject

Explosive Dynamicsblast wavesinfrasound[SDU.STU.VO]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/VolcanologystrombolianExplosive volcanism

description

Infrasonic and seismic waveforms were collected during violent strombolian activity at Yasur Volcano (Vanuatu). Averaging similar to 3000 seismic events showed stable waveforms, evidencing a low-frequency (0.1-0.3Hz) signal preceding similar to 5-6s the explosion. Infrasonic waveforms were mostly asymmetric with a sharp compressive (5-106Pa) onset, followed by a small long-lasting rarefaction phase. Regardless of the pressure amplitude, the ratio between the positive and negative phases was constant. These waveform characteristics closely resembled blast waves. Infrared imagery showed an apparent cold spherical front similar to 20 m thick, which moved between 342 and 405m/s before the explosive hot gas/fragments cloud. We interpret this cold front as that produced by the vapor condensation induced by the passage of the shock front. We suggest that violent strombolian activity at Yasur was driven by supersonic dynamics with gas expanding at 1.1 Mach number inside the conduit.

10.1002/2013gl057900http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2013GL057900