P. A. Jarvis, T. G. Caldwell, C. Noble, Y. Ogawa, C. Vagasky
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The 15 January 2022 eruption of Hunga volcano, Tonga, significantly impacted the Kingdom of Tonga as well as the wider Pacific region. The eruption column attained a maximum height of 58 km whilst the umbrella cloud reached a diameter approaching 600 km within about 3 h. The frequency of volcanic lightning generated during the eruption was also unprecedented, with the Vaisala Global Lightning Database (GLD360) recording over 3 × 105 strikes over a 2-h period. We have combined Himawari-8 satellite imagery with the spatiotemporal distribution of lightning strikes to constrain the dynamics of umbrella spreading and infer a timeline of events for the climactic phase of the eruption. Lightning was initially concentrated directly above Hunga, with an areal extent that grew with the observed eruption cloud. However, about 20 min after the eruption onset, radial structure appeared in the lightning spatial distribution, with strikes clustered both directly above Hunga and in an annulus of radius ~ 50 km. Comparison with satellite imagery shows that this annulus coincided with the umbrella cloud front. The lightning annulus and umbrella front grew synchronously to a radius of ~ 150 km before the umbrella cloud growth rate decreased whilst the annulus itself contracted to a smaller radius of about 50 km again. We interpret that the lightning annulus resulted from an enhanced rate of particle collisions and subsequent triboelectrification due to enhanced vorticity in the umbrella cloud head. Our results demonstrate that volcanic lightning observations can provide insights into the internal dynamics of umbrella clouds and should motivate more quantitative models of umbrella spreading.
期刊介绍:
Bulletin of Volcanology was founded in 1922, as Bulletin Volcanologique, and is the official journal of the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth’s Interior (IAVCEI). The Bulletin of Volcanology publishes papers on volcanoes, their products, their eruptive behavior, and their hazards. Papers aimed at understanding the deeper structure of volcanoes, and the evolution of magmatic systems using geochemical, petrological, and geophysical techniques are also published. Material is published in four sections: Review Articles; Research Articles; Short Scientific Communications; and a Forum that provides for discussion of controversial issues and for comment and reply on previously published Articles and Communications.