Tilt and strain change during the explosion at Minami-dake, Sakurajima, on November 13, 2017

Abstract We herein propose an alternative model for deformation caused by an eruption at Sakurajima, which has been previously interpreted as being due to a Mogi-type spherical point source beneath Minami-dake. On November 13, 2017, a large explosion with a plume height of 4200 m occurred at Minami-...

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Main Authors: Kohei Hotta, Masato Iguchi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-03-01
Series:Earth, Planets and Space
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-021-01392-6
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spelling doaj-e074312fbecc411290f042ba32755c962021-03-21T12:49:17ZengSpringerOpenEarth, Planets and Space1880-59812021-03-0173111310.1186/s40623-021-01392-6Tilt and strain change during the explosion at Minami-dake, Sakurajima, on November 13, 2017Kohei Hotta0Masato Iguchi1Faculty of Sustainable Design, University of ToyamaSakurajima Volcano Research Center, Disaster Prevention Research Institute, Kyoto UniversityAbstract We herein propose an alternative model for deformation caused by an eruption at Sakurajima, which has been previously interpreted as being due to a Mogi-type spherical point source beneath Minami-dake. On November 13, 2017, a large explosion with a plume height of 4200 m occurred at Minami-dake. During the 3 min following the onset of the explosion (November 13, 2017, 22:07–22:10 (Japan standard time (UTC + 9); the same hereinafter), phase 1, a large strain with changes up to 120 nstrain was detected at the Arimura observation tunnel (AVOT) located approximately 2.1 km southeast from the Minami-dake crater. After the peak of the explosion (November 13, 2017, 22:10–24:00), phase 2, a large deflation was detected at every monitoring station due to the continuous Strombolian eruption. Subsidence toward Minami-dake was detected at five out of six stations, whereas subsidence toward the north of Sakurajima was detected at the newly installed Komen observation tunnel (KMT), located approximately 4.0 km northeast from the Minami-dake crater. The large strain change at AVOT as well as small tilt changes at all stations and small strain changes at the Harutayama observation tunnel (HVOT) and KMT during phase 1 can be explained by a very shallow deflation source beneath Minami-dake at 0.1 km below sea level (bsl). For phase 2, a deeper deflation source beneath Minami-dake at a depth of 3.3 km bsl was found in addition to the shallow source beneath Minami-dake, which turned inflation after the deflation that occurred during phase 1. However, this model cannot explain the tilt change of KMT. Adding a spherical deflation source beneath Kita-dake at a depth of 3.2 km bsl can explain the tilt and strain change at KMT and the other stations. The Kita-dake source was also found in a previous study of long-term ground deformation. Not only the deeper Minami-dake source M D, but also the Kita-dake source deflated due to the Minami-dake explosion.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-021-01392-6Sakurajima volcanoSpherical sourceDikeTiltStrain
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kohei Hotta
Masato Iguchi
spellingShingle Kohei Hotta
Masato Iguchi
Tilt and strain change during the explosion at Minami-dake, Sakurajima, on November 13, 2017
Earth, Planets and Space
Sakurajima volcano
Spherical source
Dike
Tilt
Strain
author_facet Kohei Hotta
Masato Iguchi
author_sort Kohei Hotta
title Tilt and strain change during the explosion at Minami-dake, Sakurajima, on November 13, 2017
title_short Tilt and strain change during the explosion at Minami-dake, Sakurajima, on November 13, 2017
title_full Tilt and strain change during the explosion at Minami-dake, Sakurajima, on November 13, 2017
title_fullStr Tilt and strain change during the explosion at Minami-dake, Sakurajima, on November 13, 2017
title_full_unstemmed Tilt and strain change during the explosion at Minami-dake, Sakurajima, on November 13, 2017
title_sort tilt and strain change during the explosion at minami-dake, sakurajima, on november 13, 2017
publisher SpringerOpen
series Earth, Planets and Space
issn 1880-5981
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract We herein propose an alternative model for deformation caused by an eruption at Sakurajima, which has been previously interpreted as being due to a Mogi-type spherical point source beneath Minami-dake. On November 13, 2017, a large explosion with a plume height of 4200 m occurred at Minami-dake. During the 3 min following the onset of the explosion (November 13, 2017, 22:07–22:10 (Japan standard time (UTC + 9); the same hereinafter), phase 1, a large strain with changes up to 120 nstrain was detected at the Arimura observation tunnel (AVOT) located approximately 2.1 km southeast from the Minami-dake crater. After the peak of the explosion (November 13, 2017, 22:10–24:00), phase 2, a large deflation was detected at every monitoring station due to the continuous Strombolian eruption. Subsidence toward Minami-dake was detected at five out of six stations, whereas subsidence toward the north of Sakurajima was detected at the newly installed Komen observation tunnel (KMT), located approximately 4.0 km northeast from the Minami-dake crater. The large strain change at AVOT as well as small tilt changes at all stations and small strain changes at the Harutayama observation tunnel (HVOT) and KMT during phase 1 can be explained by a very shallow deflation source beneath Minami-dake at 0.1 km below sea level (bsl). For phase 2, a deeper deflation source beneath Minami-dake at a depth of 3.3 km bsl was found in addition to the shallow source beneath Minami-dake, which turned inflation after the deflation that occurred during phase 1. However, this model cannot explain the tilt change of KMT. Adding a spherical deflation source beneath Kita-dake at a depth of 3.2 km bsl can explain the tilt and strain change at KMT and the other stations. The Kita-dake source was also found in a previous study of long-term ground deformation. Not only the deeper Minami-dake source M D, but also the Kita-dake source deflated due to the Minami-dake explosion.
topic Sakurajima volcano
Spherical source
Dike
Tilt
Strain
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-021-01392-6
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