AI Article Synopsis

  • Explosive silicic eruptions can create ash that significantly affects human health, agriculture, infrastructure, and aviation, highlighting the need for accurate ash dispersion models.
  • Traditional methods estimate the total grain size distribution (TGSD) of ash based on deposits, but this study finds discrepancies, particularly with fine and ultra-fine ash particles.
  • The research introduces a model showing that smaller ash particles are often trapped and sintered in the subsurface due to turbophoresis, suggesting that the TGSD from eruptions doesn't always reflect the conditions of magmatic sources and can influence eruption behavior.

Article Abstract

Ash emission in explosive silicic eruptions can have widespread impacts for human health, agriculture, infrastructure, and aviation. Estimates of the total grainsize distribution (TGSD) generated during explosive magma fragmentation underpins eruption models and ash dispersal forecasts. Conventionally, the TGSD constrained via erupted deposits is assumed to match the TGSD produced at explosive fragmentation. Here we present observations from within the vent of a recent rhyolitic eruption (Cordón Caulle, Chile, 2011-2012), demonstrating that fine (<63 μm diameter) and ultra-fine (<2.5 μm diameter) ash particles are captured and sintered to fracture surfaces, and thus sequestered in the shallow subsurface, rather than emitted. We establish a conceptual model-uniquely contextualised through a combination of syn-eruptive observations and detailed post-eruption field investigation-in which turbophoresis (particle migration towards zones of lower turbulence) and rapid sintering create an inverse relationship between particle size and the probability of its subsurface capture. Such size-dependent capture efficiency preferentially removes submicron-diameter ash from the erupted componentry, decoupling the erupted size distribution from magmatic source conditions and potentially playing an important role in modulating eruption dynamics.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9372141PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-32522-7DOI Listing

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