57 research outputs found

    Topology assessment for 3 + 3 terminal offshore DC grid considering DC fault management

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    Offshore DC Grids as an Interconnection of Radial Systems : Protection and Control aspects

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    Eruption versus intrusion? Arrest of propagation of constant volume, buoyant, liquid-filled cracks in an elastic, brittle host

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    International audienceWhen a volume of magma is released from a source at depth, one key question is whether or not this will culminate in an eruption or in the emplacement of a shallow intrusion. We address some of the physics behind this question by describing and interpreting laboratory experiments on the propagation of cracks filled with fixed volumes of buoyant liquid in a brittle, elastic host. Experiments were isothermal, and the liquid was incompressible. The cracks propagated vertically because of liquid buoyancy but were then found to come to a halt at a configuration of static mechanical equilibrium, a result that is inconsistent with the prediction of the theory of linear elastic fracture mechanics in two dimensions. We interpret this result as due to a three-dimensional effect. At the curved crack front, horizontal cracking is necessary in order for vertical propagation to take place. As the crack elongates and thins, the former becomes progressively harder and, in the end, impossible to fracture. We present a scaling law for the final length and breadth of cracks as a function of a governing dimensionless parameter, constructed from the liquid volume, the buoyancy, and host fracture toughness. An important implication of this result is that a minimum volume of magma is required for a volcanic eruption to occur for a given depth of magma reservoir

    Effect of solidification on a propagating dike

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    International audienceMagma migration through the brittle crust from depth occurs by the propagation of hydraulic fractures or dikes. Volcanic eruptions occur at the last stage if and when a propagating dike reaches the surface. Dike propagation involves complex physics because of several processes that are simultaneously occurring such as viscous flow of magma, rock fracture, elastic deformation of the host rock, and potentially large changes of the physical properties of the magma (crystallization, degassing, solidification, etc.). Currently the most practical way in the field or in terms of field measurements to follow the migration of magma before it reaches the surface is the analysis of the seismicity generated; nevertheless, a physical model that quantitatively relates the flux of magma in the dike to the seismicity is lacking. We present here laboratory experiments involving propagation of a fluid-filled crack such that the fluid solidifies upon contact with the cold elastic host. We show that this can lead to a way of estimating the flux of the injection as a function of the surface creation rate. The latter is shown to be a more reliable gauge of magma flux than the upward propagating velocity. In the geologic application of a propagating dike, the rate of creation of surface area may be related to the rate of release of seismic energy. Although this latter relation needs further work to be quantitatively reliable, our new model nevertheless indicates how a new general framework can be constructed

    An overview of lava dome evolution, dome collapse and cyclicity at Soufriere Hills Volcano, Montserrat, 2005-2007

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    The third episode of lava dome growth at Soufrière Hills Volcano, Montserrat was characterised by higher average magma discharge rates than either previous dome growth episode at this volcano and yet fewer collapses. During sustained dome growth at moderate‐high average rates (>6 m3/s), we identified 2–6 week discharge pulses that each supplied c.20 Mm3 magma from depth. Our observations are consistent with some existing models but we explain discrepancies by a combination of higher volatile contents and higher ascent rates. Cycles of c. 11–16 days were evident in rockfall, LP rockfall and shallow LP earthquake counts related to dome growth and degassing. We speculate that degassing at the conduit margins together with stick‐slip conduit flow may drive these cycles. Only one major collapse >10 Mm3 occurred during the third episode (on May 20, 2006) as a new magma pulse entered the dome and coincided with heavy rainfall

    Syn-eruptive, soft-sediment deformation of deposits from dilute pyroclastic density current: triggers from granular shear, dynamic pore pressure, ballistic impacts and shock waves

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    Soft-sediment deformation structures can provide valuable information about the conditions of parent flows, the sediment state and the surrounding environment. Here, examples of soft-sediment deformation in deposits of dilute pyroclastic density currents are documented and possible syn-eruptive triggers suggested. Outcrops from six different volcanoes have been compiled in order to provide a broad perspective on the variety of structures: SoufriSre Hills (Montserrat), Tungurahua (Ecuador), Ubehebe craters (USA), Laacher See (Germany), and Tower Hill and Purrumbete lakes (both Australia). The variety of features can be classified in four groups: (1) tubular features such as pipes; (2) isolated, laterally oriented deformation such as overturned or oversteepened laminations and vortex-shaped laminae; (3) folds-and-faults structures involving thick (> 30 cm) units; (4) dominantly vertical inter-penetration of two layers such as potatoids, dishes, or diapiric flame-like structures. The occurrence of degassing pipes together with basal intrusions suggest fluidization during flow stages, and can facilitate the development of other soft-sediment deformation structures. Variations from injection dikes to suction-driven, local uplifts at the base of outcrops indicate the role of dynamic pore pressure. Isolated, centimeter-scale, overturned beds with vortex forms have been interpreted to be the signature of shear instabilities occurring at the boundary of two granular media. They may represent the frozen record of granular, pseudo Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities. Their recognition can be a diagnostic for flows with a granular basal boundary layer. Vertical inter-penetration and those folds-and-faults features related to slumps are driven by their excess weight and occur after deposition but penecontemporaneous to the eruption. The passage of shock waves emanating from the vent may also produce trains of isolated, fine-grained overturned beds that disturb the surface bedding without occurrence of a sedimentation phase in the vicinity of explosion centers. Finally, ballistic impacts can trigger unconventional sags producing local displacement or liquefaction. Based on the deformation depth, these can yield precise insights into depositional unit boundaries. Such impact structures may also be at the origin of some of the steep truncation planes visible at the base of the so-called 'chute and pool' structures. Dilute pyroclastic density currents occur contemporaneously with seismogenic volcanic explosions. They can experience extremely high sedimentation rates and may flow at the border between traction, granular and fluid-escape boundary zones. They are often deposited on steep slopes and can incorporate large amounts of water and gas in the sediment. These are just some of the many possible triggers acting in a single environment, and they reveal the potential for insights into the eruptive and flow mechanisms of dilute pyroclastic density currents

    The damaging November 2022 Mw 5.6 earthquake in West Java, Indonesia

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    On 21 November 2022, a MW 5.6. earthquake hit Cianjur area in West Java, Indonesia. The small magnitude earthquake claimed 329 people’s lives, and about 114,414 people were taking shelter in refugee camps as of 1 December 2022 according to the National Disaster Mitigation Agency (BNPB) of Indonesia. We produced maps of coseismic deformation and surface disturbance (a.k.a. Damage Proxy Map, DPM) using Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) data acquired by the ALOS-2 satellite about 11 hours after the earthquake. We combine and analyze ground observations, coseismic deformation and surface disturbance maps derived from ALOS-2 and Sentinel-1 SAR data, seismic waveforms of the mainshock and aftershocks, high-rate GNSS data, and tiltmeter data to characterize the source parameters of the earthquake and damage caused by the strong ground motion, landslides, and liquefaction, and study the potential impact of the event on the geohazards of the area
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