Abstract

SUMMARY On 15 January 2022, a large eruption of the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano in Tonga triggered globally observed tsunami waves. While the first arrival in the observed wave trains is now widely known to be related to the atmospheric Lamb wave generated by the eruption, large later phases, whose amplitudes were comparable to the first ones, were also recorded. In this study, we estimated the source of the later phases based on the Vespa analysis and proposed a new numerical scheme to reproduce them. The Vespa analysis estimates the arrival time and incident angle of each signal by a slant-stack process using its theoretical traveltime. The Vespa analysis revealed that small atmospheric waves excited the large later tsunamis. For the numerical experiments, we used two types of synthetic methods: finite difference method and normal mode theory. We found that both a good atmospheric wave model and bathymetric effect were important to generate the atmospheric-induced tsunamis corresponding to the later phases. A hybrid method calculating tsunamis by the finite difference method with the atmospheric waves by the normal mode theory as the input successfully reproduced the observed records, particularly in amplitude over the entire records.

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