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Muon Imaging of Volcanic Conduit Explains Link between Eruption Frequency and Ground Deformation
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  • László Oláh,
  • Giuseppe Gallo,
  • Gergő Hamar,
  • Osamu Kamoshida,
  • Giovanni Leone,
  • Edward Llewellin,
  • Domenico Lo Presti,
  • Gábor Nyitrai,
  • Takao Ohminato,
  • Shouhei Ohno,
  • Hiroyuki K.M. Tanaka,
  • Dezső Varga
László Oláh
Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Giuseppe Gallo
Department of Physics and Astronomy 'E. Majorana', University of Catania
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Gergő Hamar
Institute for Particle and Nuclear Physics, Wigner Research Centre for Physics
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Osamu Kamoshida
NEC
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Giovanni Leone
Universidad de Atacama
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Edward Llewellin
Univ Durham
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Domenico Lo Presti
University of Catania
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Gábor Nyitrai
Institute for Particle and Nuclear Physics, Wigner Research Centre for Physics
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Takao Ohminato
Earthquake Research Institute
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Shouhei Ohno
NEC
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Hiroyuki K.M. Tanaka
University of Tokyo
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Dezső Varga
Wigner Research Centre for Physics of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
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Abstract

An inverse correlation was observed between eruption frequency and ground surface deformation of Sakurajima volcano (Japan) during November 2018 to April 2021. Over the same period, the mass density of magma in the upper conduit of the active crater was monitored via muography. Mass density increased significantly during inflation, when eruption frequency was low, and decreased during deflation, when eruption frequency was high. On the basis of the muography data, we find that periods of low eruption frequency are associated with the formation of a dense plug in the shallow conduit, which we infer caused inflation of the edifice by trapping pressurized magmatic gas. Conversely, periods of high eruption frequency are associated with the absence of a dense plug, which we infer allows gas to escape, leading to deflation. Muography thus reveals the in-conduit physical mechanism for the observed correlation, with implications for interpretation of deformation at other volcanoes.