Modeling dike propagation in both vertical length and horizontal breadth
We present analog experiments on dike propagation, followed by a numerical model of horizontal and vertical growth, which is partially analytical and partially based on empirical observations. Experimental results show that the growth rates are similar until buoyancy becomes significant and, afterwa...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1649892023-03-07T15:36:20Z Modeling dike propagation in both vertical length and horizontal breadth Pansino, Stephen Emadzadeh, Adel Taisne, Benoit Asian School of the Environment Earth Observatory of Singapore Science::Geology Analog Experiments Dike We present analog experiments on dike propagation, followed by a numerical model of horizontal and vertical growth, which is partially analytical and partially based on empirical observations. Experimental results show that the growth rates are similar until buoyancy becomes significant and, afterward, vertical growth dominates. The numerical model is defined for different conditions in a homogeneous medium: (a) constant flux, fracture-limited propagation; (b) constant flux, viscous-limited propagation; and (c) variable flux dependent on the driving pressure and dike dimensions. These conditions distinguish between cases when the influx depends on the deeper source of magma (e.g., a conduit, independent of the dike geometry) and when it depends on the dike, so the influx can change as it grows. In all cases, the ratio of vertical to horizontal propagation is proportional to the ratio of buoyancy pressure to source pressure, in which buoyancy drives vertical propagation. We test the numerical model on dikes observed at Piton de la Fournaise, in which the dimensions were estimated using geodetic and seismic data. The results show that the final dimensions can be reproduced using magma-crust density differences of 50–300 kg/m3, viscosities of 30–300 Pa·s, influxes of 50–750 m3/s and shear moduli of ∼10 GPa. The modeled magma and host rock parameters agree with previous studies of the volcano, while the flux is higher than what is typically observed during eruption. This implies a variable injection condition, in which the flux peaks during propagation and diminishes by the onset of eruption. Ministry of Education (MOE) National Research Foundation (NRF) Published version This research was supported by the National Research Foundation Singapore (award NRF2015-NRF-ISF001-2437) and the Singapore Ministry of Education under the Research Centers of Excellence initiative. S. Pansino was funded by a Newton International Fellowship (award NIF\R1\202137) supported by the Royal Society. 2023-03-07T01:20:06Z 2023-03-07T01:20:06Z 2022 Journal Article Pansino, S., Emadzadeh, A. & Taisne, B. (2022). Modeling dike propagation in both vertical length and horizontal breadth. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 127(10). https://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2022JB024593 2169-9313 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164989 10.1029/2022JB024593 2-s2.0-85141151160 10 127 en NRF2015−NRF−ISF001−2437 Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth © 2022 The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. application/pdf |
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Science::Geology Analog Experiments Dike Pansino, Stephen Emadzadeh, Adel Taisne, Benoit Modeling dike propagation in both vertical length and horizontal breadth |
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We present analog experiments on dike propagation, followed by a numerical model of horizontal and vertical growth, which is partially analytical and partially based on empirical observations. Experimental results show that the growth rates are similar until buoyancy becomes significant and, afterward, vertical growth dominates. The numerical model is defined for different conditions in a homogeneous medium: (a) constant flux, fracture-limited propagation; (b) constant flux, viscous-limited propagation; and (c) variable flux dependent on the driving pressure and dike dimensions. These conditions distinguish between cases when the influx depends on the deeper source of magma (e.g., a conduit, independent of the dike geometry) and when it depends on the dike, so the influx can change as it grows. In all cases, the ratio of vertical to horizontal propagation is proportional to the ratio of buoyancy pressure to source pressure, in which buoyancy drives vertical propagation. We test the numerical model on dikes observed at Piton de la Fournaise, in which the dimensions were estimated using geodetic and seismic data. The results show that the final dimensions can be reproduced using magma-crust density differences of 50–300 kg/m3, viscosities of 30–300 Pa·s, influxes of 50–750 m3/s and shear moduli of ∼10 GPa. The modeled magma and host rock parameters agree with previous studies of the volcano, while the flux is higher than what is typically observed during eruption. This implies a variable injection condition, in which the flux peaks during propagation and diminishes by the onset of eruption. |
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Asian School of the Environment |
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Asian School of the Environment Pansino, Stephen Emadzadeh, Adel Taisne, Benoit |
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Article |
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Pansino, Stephen Emadzadeh, Adel Taisne, Benoit |
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Pansino, Stephen |
title |
Modeling dike propagation in both vertical length and horizontal breadth |
title_short |
Modeling dike propagation in both vertical length and horizontal breadth |
title_full |
Modeling dike propagation in both vertical length and horizontal breadth |
title_fullStr |
Modeling dike propagation in both vertical length and horizontal breadth |
title_full_unstemmed |
Modeling dike propagation in both vertical length and horizontal breadth |
title_sort |
modeling dike propagation in both vertical length and horizontal breadth |
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2023 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/164989 |
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1761781201197072384 |