Abstract

Imaging geological structures through cosmic muon radiography is a newly developed technique which shows a great potential in volcanology. Here we demonstrate that muon radiography permits to detect and characterize mass movements in shallow hydrothermal systems of low-energy active volcanoes like the La Soufrière lava dome. We present an experiment conducted on this volcano during the Summer 2014 and bring evidence that very important density changes occurred in three domains of the lava dome. Depending on their position and on the medium porosity the volumes of these domains vary from 1 × 106 m3 to 7 × 106 m3. However, the total mass budget remains approximately constant : two domains show a mass loss (Δm∈ [−0.8;−0.4] × 109 kg) and the third one a mass gain (Δm∈ [1.5; 2.5] × 109 kg). We attribute the negative mass changes to the formation of steam in shallow hydrothermal reservoir previously partly filled with liquid water. This coincides with the emergence of new fumaroles on top of the volcano. The positive mass change is synchronized with the negative mass changes indicating that liquid water probably flowed from the two reservoirs invaded by steam toward the third reservoir.

Highlights

  • Imaging geological structures through cosmic muon radiography is a newly developed technique which shows a great potential in volcanology

  • The positive mass change is synchronized with the negative mass changes indicating that liquid water probably flowed from the two reservoirs invaded by steam toward the third reservoir

  • The aim of this paper is to demonstrate the possibility to use muon radiography to monitor density changes in the shallow hydrothermal system inside the lava dome of the La Soufrière of Guadeloupe

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Summary

Soufrière of Guadeloupe volcano

Kevin Jourde[1,2], Dominique Gibert[3,4], Jacques Marteau[2], Jean de Bremond d’Ars3 & Jean-Christophe Komorowski[1,4]. We demonstrate that muon radiography permits to detect and characterize mass movements in shallow hydrothermal systems of low-energy active volcanoes like the La Soufrière lava dome. We attribute the negative mass changes to the formation of steam in shallow hydrothermal reservoir previously partly filled with liquid water This coincides with the emergence of new fumaroles on top of the volcano. The aim of this paper is to demonstrate the possibility to use muon radiography to monitor density changes in the shallow hydrothermal system inside the lava dome of the La Soufrière of Guadeloupe. We briefly discuss the consequences for the dynamics of the shallow hydrothermal system

The muon radiography experiment
Evidence of opacity changes inside the La Soufrière lava dome
Discussion and Conclusions
Findings
Additional Information
Full Text
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