Susan Sakimoto

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To date, actively flowing lava has only been observed on Earth and on Jupiter’s moon Io. This lack of observation means that for the vast majority of volcanic systems in the Solar System, solidified lava-flow morphologies are used to infer important information about eruption and emplacement parameters. These include: lava supply rate, lava composition, lava rheology, and determination of laminar or turbulent emplacement regimes. Commonly used models that relate simple lava flow morphologic properties (e.g., width, thickness, length) to emplacement characteristics are based on assumptions that are readily misinterpreted. For example, the simplifying assumption of fully turbulent lava flow allows for a thermally mixed flow interior, but ignores the lava properties that naturally work to suppress full turbulence (such as thermal boundary layers encasing active lava flows, and a temperature-dependent lava rheology). However, full turbulence in silicate lava flows erupted into environments that have temperatures lower than the lava solidification temperature requires a rare combination of characteristics. We model Bingham Plastic, Newtonian, and Herschel-Bulkley fluids in rectangular channels, tubes, and sheets with computational fluid dynamics (COMSOL) software to obtain flow solutions and general flow rate equations and compare them to field measurements of volcanic velocity and flow rates. We present these as more realistic alternatives to older simpler rate-from-morphology models. We find that several lava rheology properties work together to delay the onset of turbulence as compared to isothermal Newtonian materials, and that while turbulent lavas flows certainly exist, they are not as prevalent as the published literature might indicate. Results obtained from models that assume full turbulence in silicate flows on the terrestrial planets should therefore be interpreted cautiously.