Description du projet
Écouter les volcans pour mieux prévoir les éruptions
L’activité des systèmes volcaniques explosifs est essentielle à l’évolution de notre monde. Cependant, notre compréhension limitée des mécanismes des processus éruptifs et post‑éruptifs nous empêche de prévoir leurs effets collectifs. De récentes découvertes expérimentales nous rapprochent de cette compréhension mécaniste. Il s’agit notamment du développement de techniques d’imagerie in situ en temps réel basées sur le synchrotron à haute température pour les systèmes en déformation, de la surveillance acoustique des processus de rupture et de fragmentation dans le magma en explosion, et des chambres de réaction environnementales dynamiques cendres‑gaz. Le projet EAVESDROP, financé par l’UE, permettra d’explorer ces découvertes récentes et d’exploiter au maximum l’effet d’une méthode expérimentale en volcanologie.
Objectif
The Earth System is impacted continually by dozens of volcanic eruptions per year. Predicting their collective effects is hampered by our incomplete mechanistic understanding of eruptive and post-eruptive processes. The activity of explosive volcanic systems especially, is a key to the evolution of our world, not only for the eruptive catastrophes themselves but also for the massive injection of volcanic materials into the critical zone of the Earth System. (e.g. Ayris and Delmelle, 2012; Baldini et al., 2015; Dingwell, 1996; Dingwell et al., 2012; Martin et al., 2009; Robock, 2000). For this reason - as well as the many pragmatic issues of living with active volcanism – a mechanistic understanding explosive volcanism and the interaction of its products in the Earth System is a grand challenge of modern Earth Sciences.
Fortunately, three recent experimental breakthroughs bring the challenge of mechanistic understanding within our grasp: these are the development of in situ high temperature 1) synchrotron-based real-time imaging techniques for deforming systems (Baker et al., 2012; Wadsworth et al., 2016). 2) acoustic monitoring of failure and fragmentation processes in exploding magma (Arciniega et al., 2015) and 3) dynamic ash-gas environmental reaction chambers (Ayris et al., 2015).
Accompanying these experimental advances, have been fundamental advances in our mechanistic view of magma ascent and eruption (Tuffen et al., 2003; Gonnermann and Manga, 2003; Lavallée et al., 2008; Castro and Dingwell, 2009), volcano seismicity (Arciniega et al., 2015; Vasseur et al., 2017) , and the fate of volcanic ash (Delmelle et al., 2018; Renggli et al., 2018). Vast experimental expertise, together with the global impact of our work to date, place me uniquely to exploit these recent advances and to bring the impact of an experimental approach to volcanology to its fullest potential, with Europe at its forefront.
Champ scientifique
Programme(s)
Thème(s)
Régime de financement
ERC-ADG - Advanced GrantInstitution d’accueil
80539 MUNCHEN
Allemagne