By Rachel Teasdale
Weather
Overcast skies with calm wind and seas (finally!)
What’s happening today?
Bathymetric map of Pressure Dive benchmarks and BPR locations, including reference site AX-105 |
This morning the Pressure Dive began with the launch of ROV Jason approximately 8 km south of the caldera, then moved into the caldera midday. AUV Sentry was launched this afternoon for a 24 hour mapping project in the caldera.
Pressure Dive
Today we started the Pressure Dive - this is a 3 ½ day campaign in which ROV Jason will visit 10 sites in a circuit that will be completed three times.
The depth to the seafloor can be extracted from the water pressure of the overlying water column. At the surface, atmospheric pressure is 14.5 psi (pounds per square inch) and that increases by an additional 14.5 psi every 10 m (33 ft) of water depth. Bill Chadwick and Scott Nooner use the water pressure on the seafloor to determine the precise depth of the seafloor at an array of seafloor monuments and then they look for changes in the depth of the monitored sites over time. This is important for understanding whether magma is welling up in the volcano, a process known as inflation, or if magma is moving out of the volcano, known as deflation. Prior to the April 2015 eruption, the caldera gradually inflated at a rate of 60 cm/yr (2 ft/yr) for several years, and then deflated suddenly by 2.4 m (8 ft) over just a few days during the eruption.
Photo of mobile pressure recorder (being placed with the Jason manipulator arm) at benchmark AX-310. |
Three instruments are involved in monitoring the “bottom pressure” to help Bill and Scott accurately detect vertical movements of the volcano. The pressure at the ten sites will be measured for 20 minutes per visit, during each of three circuits by ROV Jason’s “Mobile Pressure Recorder” (MPR; see image at left). Repeated measurements during the three circuits help to reduce errors in the measurements. Pressure sensors are more stable when kept at depth, so ROV Jason (and the ship) will move back and forth between each site, rather than bringing the ROV (with the pressure sensor) up and down between sites.
Photo of a mini-pressure recorder (in green and blue cylinder) and the mobile pressure recorder (in orange housing) being placed with the Jason manipulator arm at benchmark AX-105. |
Bathymetric map of Axial Seamount caldera showing the cabled network (black lines), 2011 lava flows (white outlines) and locations of cabled BPR instruments (red circles) of the Ocean Observatory Initiative (OOI); from http://www.pmel.noaa.gov/eoi/rsn/ |
Bottom Pressure Recorder of the OOI Cabled network. |
Glenn Sasagawa, Bill Chadwick, and Matt Heintz in 2013 just prior to the launch of the Self-Calibrating Pressure Recorder (SCPR) in Axial Seamount’s caldera. |
The suite of pressure recorders are used collectively because the measurements of each can be compared to each other and have different strengths. The BPRs collect data continuously but the pressure sensors have a tendency to drift mechanically at a rate similar to the annual uplift of the caldera during non-eruptive stages. Data collected in the MPR campaign are used to compare and correct the BPR drift but are collected only during expeditions with submersibles like ROV Jason, so are expensive and infrequent. Measurements from the cabled network provide real-time data but are currently only available at three sites in the caldera and will not operate if power or communication is interrupted.
Use of multiple data sets that are collected at a variety of sites around the summit of the volcano provides the best possible data to help Bill, Scott, Glenn and numerous colleagues understand how the volcano inflates and deflates in response to magma supplied from below. These movements give information about how much magma is moving in or out of the volcano, how eruptions are triggered, and also can be used to forecast when the volcano is ready to erupt again.
Find more information about the OOI cabled network, see:
http://oceanobservatories.org/
and BPR data from the OOI cabled network are displayed at:
http://pmel.noaa.gov/eoi/rsn/