Publication | Open Access
Volume Flow Rate Estimation for Small Explosions at Mt. Etna, Italy, From Acoustic Waveform Inversion
20
Citations
38
References
2019
Year
Volcanic Gas ChemistryVolcanologyEngineeringSeismic WaveAtmospheric AcousticAcoustic GreenAcoustic Waveform InversionEarth ScienceExplosionsGeophysicsVolcano MonitoringOcean AcousticsVolcanic ProcessSeismic ImagingHorizontal Dipole TermsRock PropertiesDetonation PhenomenonAerospace EngineeringSeismologyCivil EngineeringUnderwater ExplosionSmall Explosions
Abstract Rapid assessment of the volume and the rate at which gas and pyroclasts are injected into the atmosphere during volcanic explosions is key to effective eruption hazard mitigation. Here, we use data from a dense infrasound network deployed in 2017 on Mt. Etna, Italy, to estimate eruptive volume flow rates (VFRs) during small gas‐and‐ash explosions. We use a finite‐difference time‐domain approximation to compute the acoustic Green's functions and perform a full waveform inversion for a multipole source, combining monopole and horizontal dipole terms. The inversion produces realistic estimates of VFR, on the order of 4 × 10 4 m 3 /s and well‐defined patterns of source directivity. This is the first application of acoustic waveform inversion at Mt. Etna. Our results demonstrate that acoustic waveform inversion is a mature and robust tool for assessment of source parameters and holds potential as a tool to provide rapid estimates of VFR in near real time.
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