Map of 34 volcanoes used to test hypothesis. Image courtesy of UH

Researchers from the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology recently discovered infrared satellite data could be used to predict when lava flow-forming eruptions will end, as recently reported by UH.

Using NASA satellite data, Estelle Bonny, a graduate student in the SOEST Department of Geology and Geophysics, and her mentor, Hawai‘i Institute for Geophysics and Planetology researcher Robert Wright, tested a hypothesis first published in 1981 that detailed how lava flow rate changes during a typical effusive volcanic eruption. The model predicted once a lava flow-forming eruption begins, the rate at which lava exits the vent quickly rises to a peak and then reduces to zero over a much longer period of time — when the rate reaches zero, the eruption has ended.

Mt. Etna from space. Image courtesy of NASA & US/Japan ASTER Science Team.

HIGP faculty developed a system that uses infrared measurements made by NASA’s MODIS sensors to detect and measure the heat emissions from erupting volcanoes — heat is used to retrieve the rate of lava flow.

“The system has been monitoring every square kilometer of Earth’s surface up to four times per day, every day, since 2000,” Bonny said. “During that time, we have detected eruptions at more than 100 different volcanoes around the globe. The database for this project contains 104 lava flow-forming eruptions from 34 volcanoes with which we could test this hypothesis.”

Once peak flow was reached, the researchers determined where the volcano was along the predicted curve of decreasing flow and therefore predict when the eruption will end. While the model has been around for decades, this is the first time satellite data was used with it to test how useful this approach is for predicting the end of an effusive eruption. The test was successful.

Ocean entry viewing of lava flow in Kalapana, Big Island, Sept. 20, 2016. Photo courtesy of National Park Service/J. Wei

“Being able to predict the end of a lava flow-forming eruption is really important, because it will greatly reduce the disturbance caused to those affected by the eruption, for example, those who live close to the volcano and have been evacuated,” Bonny said.

Wright said the study is potentially relevant for the Big Island and its active volcanoes.

“A future eruption of Mauna Loa may be expected to display the kind of pattern of lava discharge rate that would allow us to use this method to try to predict the end of eruption from space,” Wright said.

In the future, the researchers plan to use this approach during an ongoing eruption as a near-real time predictive tool.


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