Artículos de revistas
Heat and mass flux measurements using Landsat images from the 2000?2004 period, Lascar volcano, northern Chile
Fecha
2015-08-15Registro en:
Gonzalez, C.; Inostroza, M.; Aguilera, F.; González, R.; Viramonte, Jose German; et al.; Heat and mass flux measurements using Landsat images from the 2000?2004 period, Lascar volcano, northern Chile; Elsevier Science; Journal Of Volcanology And Geothermal Research; 15-8-2015; 277-292
0377-0273
Autor
Gonzalez, C.
Inostroza, M.
Aguilera, F.
González, R.
Viramonte, Jose German
Menzies, A.
Resumen
A qualitative and quantitative analysis of 13 Landsat TM and ETM+images of Lascar volcano for the 2000-2004 period was performed by applying the three bands and three components method to determine heat and mass flux and understand the magma circulation process in a passive degassing volcano related to permanent fumarolic activity. The behavior and evolution of spectral radiance during the study period suggest that prior to low-to-moderate magnitude eruptions these values reach their localized temporal minimumlevels, corresponding to 1.9-4.38mW/cm2srμmin July 2000 and 4.38-7.11mW/cm2srμmin December 2003 eruptions, respectively. Similar behavior is observed for anomaly area, heat and mass fluxes. During the 2000-2004 period the heat flux was estimated to vary from 75.46 and 10,527 MW, while mass flux ranged between 131 and 18,469 kg s−1. A magma circulation model is proposed to explain these variations, where the thermal anomaly is related to the presence of a fumarolic field and fluids movement from a magma chamber located at ~10-17 km depth.