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Experimental observations of pressure oscillations and flow regimes in an analogue volcanic system.

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Experimental observations of pressure oscillations and flow regimes in an analogue volcanic system. / Lane, Steve J.; Chouet, Bernard A.; Phillips, Jeremy C. et al.
In: Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, Vol. 106, No. B4, 10.04.2001, p. 6461-6476.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Lane, SJ, Chouet, BA, Phillips, JC, Dawson, P, Ryan, GA & Hurst, E 2001, 'Experimental observations of pressure oscillations and flow regimes in an analogue volcanic system.', Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, vol. 106, no. B4, pp. 6461-6476. https://doi.org/10.1029/2000JB900376

APA

Lane, S. J., Chouet, B. A., Phillips, J. C., Dawson, P., Ryan, G. A., & Hurst, E. (2001). Experimental observations of pressure oscillations and flow regimes in an analogue volcanic system. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 106(B4), 6461-6476. https://doi.org/10.1029/2000JB900376

Vancouver

Lane SJ, Chouet BA, Phillips JC, Dawson P, Ryan GA, Hurst E. Experimental observations of pressure oscillations and flow regimes in an analogue volcanic system. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 2001 Apr 10;106(B4):6461-6476. doi: 10.1029/2000JB900376

Author

Lane, Steve J. ; Chouet, Bernard A. ; Phillips, Jeremy C. et al. / Experimental observations of pressure oscillations and flow regimes in an analogue volcanic system. In: Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 2001 ; Vol. 106, No. B4. pp. 6461-6476.

Bibtex

@article{338d2669125d45df8d7fd36801bc248e,
title = "Experimental observations of pressure oscillations and flow regimes in an analogue volcanic system.",
abstract = "Gas-liquid flows, designed to be analogous to those in volcanic conduits, are generated in the laboratory using organic gas-gum rosin mixtures expanding in a vertically mounted tube. The expanding fluid shows a range of both flow and pressure oscillation behaviors. Weakly supersaturated source liquids produce a low Reynolds number flow with foam expanding from the top surface of a liquid that exhibits zero fluid velocity at the tube wall; i.e., the conventional “no-slip” boundary condition. Pressure oscillations, often with strong long-period characteristics and consistent with longitudinal and radial resonant oscillation modes, are detected in these fluids. Strongly supersaturated source liquids generate more energetic flows that display a number of flow regimes. These regimes include a static liquid source, viscous flow, detached flow (comprising gas-pockets-at-wall and foam-in-gas annular flow, therefore demonstrating strong radial heterogeneity), and a fully turbulent transonic fragmented or mist flow. Each of these flow regimes displays characteristic pressure oscillations that can be related to resonance of flow features or wall impact phenomena. The pressure oscillations are produced by the degassing processes without the need of elastic coupling to the confining medium or flow restrictors and valvelike features. The oscillatory behavior of the experimental flows is compared to seismoacoustic data from a range of volcanoes where resonant oscillation of the fluid within the conduit is also often invoked as controlling the observed oscillation frequencies. On the basis of the experimental data we postulate on the nature of seismic signals that may be measured during large-scale explosive activity.",
author = "Lane, {Steve J.} and Chouet, {Bernard A.} and Phillips, {Jeremy C.} and Philip Dawson and Ryan, {Graham A.} and Emma Hurst",
note = "Copyright (2001) American Geophysical Union.",
year = "2001",
month = apr,
day = "10",
doi = "10.1029/2000JB900376",
language = "English",
volume = "106",
pages = "6461--6476",
journal = "Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "B4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Experimental observations of pressure oscillations and flow regimes in an analogue volcanic system.

AU - Lane, Steve J.

AU - Chouet, Bernard A.

AU - Phillips, Jeremy C.

AU - Dawson, Philip

AU - Ryan, Graham A.

AU - Hurst, Emma

N1 - Copyright (2001) American Geophysical Union.

PY - 2001/4/10

Y1 - 2001/4/10

N2 - Gas-liquid flows, designed to be analogous to those in volcanic conduits, are generated in the laboratory using organic gas-gum rosin mixtures expanding in a vertically mounted tube. The expanding fluid shows a range of both flow and pressure oscillation behaviors. Weakly supersaturated source liquids produce a low Reynolds number flow with foam expanding from the top surface of a liquid that exhibits zero fluid velocity at the tube wall; i.e., the conventional “no-slip” boundary condition. Pressure oscillations, often with strong long-period characteristics and consistent with longitudinal and radial resonant oscillation modes, are detected in these fluids. Strongly supersaturated source liquids generate more energetic flows that display a number of flow regimes. These regimes include a static liquid source, viscous flow, detached flow (comprising gas-pockets-at-wall and foam-in-gas annular flow, therefore demonstrating strong radial heterogeneity), and a fully turbulent transonic fragmented or mist flow. Each of these flow regimes displays characteristic pressure oscillations that can be related to resonance of flow features or wall impact phenomena. The pressure oscillations are produced by the degassing processes without the need of elastic coupling to the confining medium or flow restrictors and valvelike features. The oscillatory behavior of the experimental flows is compared to seismoacoustic data from a range of volcanoes where resonant oscillation of the fluid within the conduit is also often invoked as controlling the observed oscillation frequencies. On the basis of the experimental data we postulate on the nature of seismic signals that may be measured during large-scale explosive activity.

AB - Gas-liquid flows, designed to be analogous to those in volcanic conduits, are generated in the laboratory using organic gas-gum rosin mixtures expanding in a vertically mounted tube. The expanding fluid shows a range of both flow and pressure oscillation behaviors. Weakly supersaturated source liquids produce a low Reynolds number flow with foam expanding from the top surface of a liquid that exhibits zero fluid velocity at the tube wall; i.e., the conventional “no-slip” boundary condition. Pressure oscillations, often with strong long-period characteristics and consistent with longitudinal and radial resonant oscillation modes, are detected in these fluids. Strongly supersaturated source liquids generate more energetic flows that display a number of flow regimes. These regimes include a static liquid source, viscous flow, detached flow (comprising gas-pockets-at-wall and foam-in-gas annular flow, therefore demonstrating strong radial heterogeneity), and a fully turbulent transonic fragmented or mist flow. Each of these flow regimes displays characteristic pressure oscillations that can be related to resonance of flow features or wall impact phenomena. The pressure oscillations are produced by the degassing processes without the need of elastic coupling to the confining medium or flow restrictors and valvelike features. The oscillatory behavior of the experimental flows is compared to seismoacoustic data from a range of volcanoes where resonant oscillation of the fluid within the conduit is also often invoked as controlling the observed oscillation frequencies. On the basis of the experimental data we postulate on the nature of seismic signals that may be measured during large-scale explosive activity.

U2 - 10.1029/2000JB900376

DO - 10.1029/2000JB900376

M3 - Journal article

VL - 106

SP - 6461

EP - 6476

JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth

JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth

IS - B4

ER -