Detecting, Modelling and Responding to Effusive Eruptions

For effusive volcanoes in resource-poor regions, there is a pressing need for a crisis response-chain bridging the global scientific community to allow provision of standard products for timely humanitarian response. As a first step in attaining this need, this Special Publication provides a complete directory of current operational capabilities for monitoring effusive eruptions. This volume also reviews the state-of-the-art in terms of satellite-based volcano hot-spot tracking and lava-flow simulation. These capabilities are demonstrated using case studies taken from well-known effusive events that have occurred worldwide over the last two decades at volcanoes such as Piton de la Fournaise, Etna, Stromboli and Kilauea. We also provide case-type response models implemented at the same volcanoes, as well as the results of a community-wide drill used to test a fully-integrated response focused on an operational hazard-GIS. Finally, the objectives and recommendations of the ‘Risk Evaluation, Detection and Simulation during Effusive Eruption Disasters’ working group are laid out in a statement of community needs by its members.
Automated monitoring of high-temperature volcanic features: from high-spatial to very-high-temporal resolution
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Published:January 01, 2016
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CiteCitation
Fabrizio Ferrucci, Barbara Hirn, 2016. "Automated monitoring of high-temperature volcanic features: from high-spatial to very-high-temporal resolution", Detecting, Modelling and Responding to Effusive Eruptions, A. J. L. Harris, T. De Groeve, F. Garel, S. A. Carn
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Abstract
Developments in spaceborne Earth Observation (EO) sensor technology over the last decade, combined with well-tested physical models and multispectral data-processing techniques developed from the early 1980s, have paved the way to the global monitoring of volcanoes by sensors of metric, decametric, kilometric and multi-kilometric spatial resolution. Such variable geometries provide for revisit intervals ranging from about monthly – at high-spatial resolution in Low-Earth Orbit – to less than 5 min – at low-spatial resolution, from geostationary platforms. There are currently about 20 spacecrafts available for carrying out 24/7 quantitative observations of volcanic unrest, at all resolutions and as close as possible to real-time. We show some successful examples of synergetic EO on volcanoes on three continents from 10 different payloads, automatically processed with three, end-to-end unsupervised procedures, on eight major eruptions and a lava lake between 2006 and 2014.
- Africa
- automated analysis
- components
- data acquisition
- data integration
- Earth Observing System
- East Africa
- effusion
- equations
- eruptions
- Ethiopia
- Europe
- Eyjafjallajokull
- global
- high-resolution methods
- Iceland
- image analysis
- imagery
- Indian Ocean Islands
- infrared spectra
- instruments
- Italy
- Mascarene Islands
- monitoring
- Mount Etna
- multispectral analysis
- orbital observations
- Piton de la Fournaise
- pixels
- radiometers
- remote sensing
- Reunion
- satellite methods
- Sicily Italy
- Southern Europe
- spectra
- technology
- temperature
- thermal anomalies
- thermal emission
- time factor
- volcanic features
- volcanoes
- volcanology
- Western Europe
- Erta Ale
- radiance
- radiant flux
- Manda Hararo