V33E-01:
On the use of remote infrasound and seismic stations to constrain eruptive sequences

Wednesday, 17 December 2014: 1:40 PM
Corentin Caudron1, Benoit Taisne1 and Milton A Garces2, (1)Earth Observatory of Singapore, Singapore, Singapore, (2)Infrasound Laboratory, Kailua Kona, HI, United States
Abstract:
The Kelud eruption was one of the strongest volcanic eruption of the decade. The eruption occurred on the 13th of February 2014 and ejected volcanic ash up to 20 km of altitude. The eruption also destroyed most of the instruments deployed in the near field. Therefore, not much information could be unraveled from the local volcano monitoring system. An explosion was clearly captured at many infrasound stations of the IMS network (and in Singapore), making it one of the biggest volcanic events recorded by the network. The high intensity, deep frequency, and infrasonic detection range of >10,000 km is characteristic of an eruptive column that injects ash into aircraft cruising altitudes and is an evident threat to aviation. The explosion signal was particularly rich in very long periods (~ 200s) and could be resolved as two distinct pulses at some sites. Interestingly, many broadband seismic instruments also recorded this event as far as 5000 kilometers. By inspecting the seismic data of the instruments located closer to the edifice (~ 150 km), we could clearly distinguish two different pulses separated by 17 minutes, followed by the arrival of very low frequencies (thanks to the coupling between ground and atmosphere). One pulse vs two pulses might have strong implications for the subsequent ash modelling. Due to the violence of the events, 4 stations out of 5 were destructed and the remaining one was saturated. This illustrates that data streams from broadband seismometers and infrasound sensors located at safe distances are extremely useful for deciphering the dynamic of the eruption and its implication in term of local, regional and global impact.