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Vulcanian eruptions with dominant single force components observed during the Asama 2004 volcanic activity in Japan

Authors :
Minoru Takeo
Hiroyuki Kumagai
Tadashi Yamashina
Taku Urabe
Etsuro Koyama
Jun Oikawa
Hiroshi Tsuji
Takao Ohminato
Source :
Earth, Planets and Space. 58:583-593
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2006.

Abstract

On September 1, 2004, Mt. Asama in central Japan erupted for the first time in 21 years. Between this moderate eruption and mid-November of the same year, 4 additional moderate eruptions occurred. We installed 8 broadband seismic stations in addition to the short period seismic network around the volcano and succeeded in recording the near-field seismic signals associated with the summit eruptions. The results of the waveform inversions clearly show that the force system exerted at the source region is dominated by vertical single force components. The source depths of the single force are shallower than 200 m from the bottom of the summit crater, and the order of magnitude of the single force is 1010–1011N. The source time history of each vertical single force component consists of two downward forces and one upward force. The initial downward force probably corresponds to the sudden removal of a lid capping the pressurized conduit. The drag force due to viscous magma moving upward in the conduit can explain the upward force. The correlation between the single force amplitudes and the amounts of volcanic deposits emitted from the summit crater are not necessarily positive, suggesting that the amount of deposits remaining within the summit crater may have played an important role in the excitation of the single force.

Details

ISSN :
18805981
Volume :
58
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Earth, Planets and Space
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4e77e7df936cc984cfd5094baa83abd4