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Published on
Abstract
A theoretical model of a volcanic plume, based on applying the
equations of motion in a plume-centered coordinate system,
suggests that the interaction between a volcanic plume and wind
causes enhanced entrainment of air and horizontal momentum, plume
bending, and a decrease in plume rise height at constant eruption
rate. Because of rapid dilution in the high windspeeds of the
polar jet, plumes that vary over more than one order of magnitude
in mass eruption rate (10^6^ to 10^8^ kg/s), if injected
into the polar jet, may all attain rise heights only slightly
different from that of the core of the jet, ~10 km, as opposed to
17 - 33 km in a still atmosphere.
The model outputs plume trajectories and rise heights, as well as pyroclast loadings as a function of height, and can therefore be used to produce input for advection-diffusion and volcanic ash transport models such as tephra2 or puff.