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Vhub: a knowledge management system to facilitate online collaborative volcano modeling and research

Abstract

Knowledge of volcanic systems and the hazards they produce is rapidly advancing as internet resources become more readily accessible, new and more sensitive field techniques are developed, and ever greater amounts of data are collected. Such rapid advances drive the need for an online collaborative knowledge management system that enables the sharing of volcanological information, and modeling and analysis tools. Vhub (http://vhub.org) is a community cyberinfrastructure platform designed for collaboration in volcanology research, education, outreach, and discovery that complements existing volcano databases and other cyberinfrastructure projects. Vhub is unique in its functionality as a nucleus for the creation of collaborative groups focused on issues such as code development, field research, education, and hazard mitigation. In addition, Vhub serves as a clearinghouse and virtual platform for computational tools relating to volcanic processes and data analysis, as well as documentation to aid in the use and understanding of these tools. By providing a means for scientists to easily disseminate data, models, and ideas, Vhub aims to promote collaboration amongst scientists and to provide resources for science education while advancing the state of understanding of volcanoes and the hazards they produce. This paper introduces the Vhub cyberinfrastructure and provides an overview of select hub features and resources.

Introduction

Volcanology has been undergoing a fundamental transformation over the past 10–15 years brought about by the internet’s facilitation of access to large volumes of information, greater community acceptance of computational modeling and statistical analysis, and increased attention to volcanic hazards. Despite these trends, the development of scientific research and applications that require numerical computation is hampered by the relative isolation of individual researchers and research groups, and by a gap between research-level development of computational models and their deployment at observatories with real-world hazard mitigation responsibilities. The emergence of innumerable web-accessible resources has many positive aspects, but sthese resources often have low visibility, insufficient documentation, and/or require computational resources or expertise that would-be end users do not possess. Each of these issues represents a barrier to the development and application or adoption of computational tools. There is an urgent need for a better approach to confront these issues that fall under the general topic of collaborative knowledge management. Such an approach should take advantage of the rapid growth of resources, provide new mechanisms for global collaboration in research, and disseminate resulting tools to researchers, observatory practitioners, educators and stakeholders, while reducing barriers associated with local infrastructure, and supporting continued growth of more focused resources that are locally managed at sites around the world.

In the 1990s, the nanoscience research community recognized similar barriers to progress within their own field and so began the development of a cyberinfrastructure “hub” to serve as a central online resource promoting connections amongst researchers and facilitating accessibility to models and information. The result of their efforts, nanoHUB (http://nanohub.org), has had profound effects on the rate of progress of nanoscience, making research tool development and use easily accessible, and enabling the use of advanced research tools for educational purposes. To support these efforts, software developers at Purdue University created the HUBzero® Platform for Scientific Collaboration (McLennan and Kennell 2010), the cyberinfrastructure that provides nanoHUB with all the functionality to develop and run online simulation tools, create private groups for collaboration, manage digital resources including videos, presentations and wiki-style content, communicate through a basic email-like messaging system, and many other capabilities.

The Vhub (short for “Volcanology hub”) cyberinfrastructure builds upon the experience and success of nanoHub to advance collaborative knowledge development, storage, and transfer within the volcanological community. By January 2014 Vhub had logged more than 15,000 users and we expect a further increase within the next 5 years, following the trend exhibited at nanoHub (see Table 1 for a comparison of Vhub and nanoHub usage metrics; note that Vhub was created 8 years after nanoHUB, and compare the number of users between nanHUB 2005 and Vhub 2013). At its core, Vhub is a community-driven platform whose content is created and managed by its users (e.g. Elmagarmid et al. 2008). As a heterogeneous science, volcanology encompasses a wide range of workers varying from those who are highly theoretical and computationally focused, to experimentalists, and to those whose work focuses on observational and analytical data (i.e., field geology, geophysics, geochemistry, and remote sensing). As a result, adoption of a hub environment by this community is complex and requires significant cross-disciplinary communication. Here we briefly describe and provide examples of some of the capabilities of Vhub that facilitate the advancement of basic and applied research currently being conducted by the diversity of work related to volcanoes, volcanic processes, and associated hazards.

Table 1 Comparison of usage statistics for nanoHUB during 2005 and 2013, and Vhub for 2013

Vhub development and vision

Vhub was conceived in 2008 with an initial focus on increasing accessibility both to quantitative models of volcanic processes and hazards, and to data sets collected for volcanoes around the world. Specifically, a means was sought to facilitate knowledge and data transfer between volcanic observatories and other researchers. While this core mission remains, Vhub has grown to provide a broader platform for collaborative research and education in volcanology (Figure 1). The project was launched in 2010 with funding from the US National Science Foundation and includes a core development team at University at Buffalo, Michigan Technological University, and University of South Florida, along with a group of collaborators from the international community (https://vhub.org/about/vhubteam). The basic software infrastructure is maintained at Purdue University where the primary Vhub servers reside (see https://hubzero.org).

Figure 1
figure 1

Vhub incorporates a variety of features designed to connect faculty at research institutions with students, scientists at volcano observatories with stakeholders, and faculty at research institutions with scientists at observatories and other institutions in charge of hazard and/or risk mitigation.

Vhub provides infrastructure for knowledge management, defined as “the creation, archiving and sharing of valued information, expertise and insight within and across communities of people and organizations with similar interests and needs” (Rosenberg 2001). In this context, Vhub development efforts have been consistent with the four general objectives of knowledge management projects (Davenport et al. 1998): 1) create knowledge repositories, 2) improve knowledge access, 3) establish an environment conductive to more effective knowledge creation, transfer and use, and 4) manage knowledge as an asset. Note that we use the word knowledge to mean not just information (data), but also tools to improve understanding and application of that understanding. Vhub is designed to function as a platform for sharing a variety of forms of knowledge, including a unique emphasis on computational tools pertaining to volcanology, and as a platform that facilitates collaboration. Vhub itself is not a database; databases can be shared on the platform, but Vhub aims principally to provide capabilities that complement rather than duplicate existing efforts centered specifically on compiling and managing data about volcanoes, such as the Global Volcanism Program (http://www.volcano.si.edu; Siebert et al. 2010), the Volcano Global Risk Identification & Analysis Project (http://www.bgs.ac.uk/vogripa/; Crosweller et al. 2012). Instead, Vhub is a portal to simulations, lectures, existing databases, educational resources, and other content of interest.

Cyberinfrastructure and membership

Vhub takes advantage of the HUBzero® open-source software platform. This software incorporates several well-known open-source packages, including an Apache web server, the Joomla content management system, PHP web scripting, and a MySQL database for storing content and usage statistics (Klimeck et al. 2008). The software is specifically designed to support scientific collaboration, research, education, and discovery, the four pillars of Vhub’s organization (Figure 1). HUBzero can handle a variety of data types including documents created with Microsoft Office©, PDFs, ASCII files, images and video clips, analysis tools, and datasets. Additionally, all uploaded content is integrated with collaboration features such as forums, wikis, blogs and Q&A. Integrating all of these packages, the Vhub web site serves as the interface between the user and the platform.

While many Vhub resources are available to the public for viewing or downloading (Table 2), membership is necessary to take full advantage of the platform. Becoming a member of the Vhub community is easy. The registration process is automatic and requires a minimum amount of personal information: login name, password, e-mail and employment status. Other information such as website url, telephone number, institution, and interests is optional, although useful for tracking Vhub’s use. Once registered, members are assigned an ID number that can be used to access their profile, contributions, usage statistics, and personal blog. For example, the ID number of one of the authors of this article is 1097, and the url to his page is https://vhub.org/members/1097; to access his personal blog simply add “/blog” at the end of that url. Each Vhub member has a profile useful for sharing contact details, interests, and a short biography. All members are also provided with an internal messaging system to strengthen communication and collaboration between members. This system works like a basic web-based email client, and includes Inbox, Sent, Archive, and Trash folders. The user can set up which messages go to Vhub’s internal Inbox and which are forwarded to an external email address. When composing a message the user can easily select any number of recipients from the list of Vhub members.

Table 2 Description of the different resource types available within Vhub

A personalizable user panel, or ‘dashboard’, is included to allow users to organize resources and user-specific information. Connecting via this interface, users view and interact with the site without needing to be aware of the complex system of software, data-storage devices, supercomputing hardware and other middleware that host and manage the content being accessed. Vhub members can thus focus only on the resources of interest to them while working towards their individual research, monitoring, or hazard mitigation goals. The dashboard can be accessed through the “My Account” link located at the top of the page. In addition to accessing a customizable dashboard and communication resources, establishing a membership account with Vhub will automatically allot users 1 Gb of disk space on hub servers, enabling them to run online simulation tools via the hub infrastructure.

Groups, collaboration, and sharing

Vhub provides capabilities for online collaboration in a variety of ways, including (1) within teams conducting basic research, (2) between participants and external advisors on complex hazard assessment projects, (3) between mentors/teachers and students, and (4) amongst community stakeholders. All such collaborations can have personalized privacy levels.

Collaboration can be restricted to a small audience through the creation of ‘groups’. Each group has a dedicated url, a name, and a logo that are set when the group is created. Any registered user can create a group, set up the content of the group, and specify who can join. The user that creates the group automatically becomes a group manager. Managers can change the description and content of group pages, send messages to all or select members, cancel memberships, promote members to managers, and assign member roles.

Group privacy settings are controlled by group manager(s), including the option to determine what content is visible to the general public, to Vhub account holders, and to group members. If designated ‘visible’, groups can be found in searches as well as by browsing (https://vhub.org/groups/browse). If set to ‘hidden’, the group is only discoverable by group members. Unique access restrictions can be set to group content as well.

Four options are available to restrict the access to a group: “Anyone”, “Restricted”, “Invite Only” and “Closed”. This allows options for membership to be requested by users and approved automatically, requested by users and approved by a group manager, initiated by group managers and accepted by users with no opportunity for users to request access, or closed such that no new members are accepted to the group.

Groups may have different purposes. Organizations such as the Commission on Monogenetic Volcanism of the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth’s Interior, IAVCEI (https://vhub.org/groups/iavcei_cmv) and the Latin-American Volcanological Association, ALVO (https://vhub.org/groups/alvo) manage groups that operate as portals to the information and activities that they promote. Research teams may set up groups to discuss their progress and internally disseminate documents and ideas. Educators may decide to manage volcanology or hazards courses and include lectures, homework assignments, and class discussions as content. Groups can also be set up to restrict access to resources such as presentations and online computational tools, thereby keeping data and sensitive information private. Vhub groups have a variety of features to facilitate their work (Table 3).

Table 3 Description of the features available for Vhub groups

Vhub’s Wiki pages and Blogs are additional means of communication that members of the platform can take advantage of (Table 2). While Vhub blogs are public and designed to contain information relevant to the general community, individual members are also provided dedicated blog space for personal communication; privacy settings for individual posts can be set when they are created or edited. Blogs can be used, for example, to report descriptions of volcanic activity or field trips, or to share personal points of view on specific subjects. A Wiki is a web-based hypertext system which supports community-oriented authoring that allows collaborative content creation (Shih et al. 2008). Vhub Wiki Pages and Articles may receive contributions from interested members either through direct editing of the wiki or through suggestions. Topic pages can be used, for example, as tutorial articles describing how laboratory techniques or computational tools work, to discuss the definition and proper use of volcanological terms, or to describe and discuss volcanological concepts (an example focusing on volcano remote sensing capabilities is https://vhub.org/topics/SatelliteMonitoring).

Knowledge repository and support network

Vhub hosts a Resource Warehouse organized into nine categories based on the type of content submitted: Courses, Data Sets/Collections, Education Materials, Offline Tools, Online Tools, Presentations, Publications, Workshops, and Miscellaneous. See Table 2 for a short description of each resource type. These contents are copyrighted by their authors and contributors, who give Vhub license to display and distribute the material according to the agreement detailed on the following webpage: https://vhub.org/legal/license. All resources on Vhub include a title, author list, abstract, and archival citation information. They are assigned a dedicated url that can be used for citation in journal publications (e.g. Rose 2011). Files uploaded to any individual resource are also assigned an exclusive url, which can be linked to from its abstract or from other resources. While there are no restrictions on the type of files that may be uploaded to the hub, in order to promote accessibility contributors are encouraged to avoid uploading files in proprietary formats that require commercial software for viewing. For example, it is recommended to save presentations and Microsoft Word documents as PDF documents before uploading to vhub.org. As part of the process of creating a resource, the contributor selects ‘tags’ to categorize the content. Tags are simply key words assigned to a resource by the user making the contribution. Tags are searchable and thus aid in resource discoverability.

Each time a new resource is created, the contributor must set the access level of its content. ‘Public’ resources grant full access, including access to the abstract and to any supporting documents uploaded with the resource, to anyone visiting the web page of that resource. When the resource is set to ‘protected’, the title and author list are visible to everyone but the abstract, references, citation information and any associated documents are only accessible by members of the specific group with which the resource is aligned. Like protected resources, ‘private’ resources must be aligned with a group. However in the case of private resources, only group members can discover and access the resource; in this case the resource and all associated content is hidden from all other users. Through these classifications, contributors have full control over whether a given resource is made available to the public or only to specified collaborators.

Since Vhub is a community-driven knowledge environment, we expect the community to contribute to this knowledge system and to learn from it at the same time. This increases the impact of collaboration and opens up new possibilities for users with few resources to gain access to collaboration pathways and shared resources.

Online simulation tools

The concept of knowledge transfer within Vhub includes development and dissemination of tools that promote the analysis and understanding of volcanic processes. To that end, one important feature of Vhub is its capacity to execute simulation, modeling, and data analysis programs within the user’s web browser while the program being executed runs on remote computing resources, negating the need for the user to install software on their local machine. These ‘Online simulation tools’ include a graphical user interface (GUI) and documentation to facilitate and encourage volcanologists, particularly those who do not regularly use modeling tools, not only to take advantage of the computational resources available to them but to use each tool appropriately. The development and use of computational tools can benefit from the many collaboration features available on Vhub including discussion panels, internal messaging, wish lists, wiki pages, and Q&A sections. These tools help to bring together program developers, experts in the field, tool users, and educators. To facilitate appropriate use of modeling tools, Vhub encourages developers and experts to describe what the models can and cannot do, their advantages over other techniques, and their limitations, as well as to provide advice on how to read and use the model results.

Questions asked from within an online tool are linked to that tool and can be accessed through the “Questions” tab on the resource page (e.g. https://vhub.org/resources/pingu/questions). The developers of the tool get an email every time a question about their tool is posted. Unless the question is closed, any member can answer a question and contribute to solve problems using a tool. Finding or posting questions (and their answers) for specific tools is easy for regular users and developers, and facilitates feedback and collaboration. All questions are listed under “Questions and Answers” in the Explore submenu.

In order to facilitate implementation of numerical simulations and/or processing algorithms by users, Vhub hosts a library of educational and training material prepared by tool developers and expert users. This material may exist in video format, as a topic wiki page, or as a downloadable pdf or other type document. Course and/or workshop materials also provide background information on the theory and practical applications of simulation tools. The developers of the tools, as well as the authors of any other resource material, can track the number of users that have accessed their contribution and obtain feedback from the community.

Additionally, tool users have the ability to ask Vhub community members to view and comment on simulation results. Researchers and students can participate in discussions and establish new collaboration paths or suggest improvements to existing tools. Findings can be shared with the community within blog or topic pages. Educators can use resources to facilitate student learning in a classroom environment (e.g. Courtland et al. 2012). From interactions like these, innumerable collaborative research opportunities emerge, including opportunities for improving both the work of those who contribute to Vhub’s knowledge repository and the users that benefit from that work.

Some of the computational tools currently available to Vhub users include: Energy Cone (rapid delineation of the impact zone by pyroclastic density currents; Sheridan and Macías 1995 Palma 2013a), Tephra2 (tephra dispersion forecast tool; Bonadonna et al. 2005 Bonadonna et al. 2013), Bent (atmospheric plume analysis; Bursik 2001; Bursik 2013), Hazmap (tephra dispersion forecast tool; Macedonio et al. 2005; Costa 2013), Titan2D (mass flow simulation tool; Pitman et al. 2003), PINGU (tool for plotting geochemical and petrological data; Cortés and Palma 2013) and BET_VH (Bayesian Event Tree analysis for Volcanic Hazards; Marzocchi et al. 2010; Tonini et al. 2012). The list of online simulation tools available on Vhub is expected to expand considerably as more volcanologists contribute tools and in so doing realize much more rapid dissemination of their work than through traditional routes (such as publishing a paper about a model and then providing the software upon request). Vhub is also becoming a central library for offline tools, which in some cases can be downloaded directly from the Vhub site (e.g., the Plumeria eruption column model; Mastin 2011) or in others provide links to the author(s)’s website where source code is available for download.

Some online simulation tools create files that are stored in the user’s account within Vhub, and they are kept after the user ends the tool session. These files can be accessed and managed, at any time, through the Workspace tool or through WebDav (see https://vhub.org/kb/tips/webdav). Below and in the Appendix we illustrate usage of the online tools Workspace, Tephra2, and Titan2D, and the offline tool OMIplot.

The workspace and model development

The Workspace is a Linux desktop environment that can be used to upload and download files stored in the user’s account, usually created by other online simulation tools (files can also be accessed through webdav, see https://vhub.org/kb/tips/webdav). The Workspace is also the perfect environment to edit, compile and test a tool in development. Developing online simulation tools within Vhub is achieved through a content-management-system for tool publication which provides a project area with wikis, a timeline that documents changes to each revision, and a subversion source-code repository (McLennan and Kennel 2010). Developers can chose whether they want to make source code private or accessible to other Vhub members, and can specify an open-source or other license. Once a tool is ready, it is committed by the developer and installed by Vhub’s server managers, at which point the developers are asked to test the working version of the tool before it is fully deployed on the hub. More information on how to create a tool for Vhub can be found at https://vhub.org/support/knowledgebase/development.

Modeling tephra fallout with Tephra2

Tephra2 is an advection–diffusion model used to forecast the accumulation of ejected volcanic material on the ground (Bonadonna et al. 2005). It can be used for civil protection purposes, such as giving public warnings and planning mitigation measures (Connor et al. 2001; Volentik et al. 2009), as a research tool for studying eruptions past and present (Johnston et al. 2012; Biass and Bonadonna 2011; Longchamp et al. 2011; Connor and Connor 2006; Volentik et al. 2010), or as an educational tool for volcanology, numerical modeling, or quantitative literacy (Courtland et al. 2012).

Users can access the Tephra2 code via either of two GUIs: ‘Tephra2’, which grants full access to the model and is intended primarily for hazards scientists and graduate students (Figure 2), and ‘Tephra2: Student Version’ which places limitations on code input and is intended primarily for high school through undergraduate students (Courtland et al. 2012).

Figure 2
figure 2

Graphical user Interface (GUI) for Tephra2. Values shown are used to calculate the Merapi example outlined in the Appendix. The wind file and grid file must be uploaded from the user’s computer. The configuration file may either be uploaded or the values of each parameter may be typed directly into the GUI. Output may be saved to storage on Vhub with the option ‘Save a copy of numerical output to Vhub workspace?’ selected. Contours to plot are listed under the second tab. Only select ‘re-use previous wind field?’ when you wish to re-apply one of the ‘random’ wind fields pre-loaded into the GUI. Default is to select a new wind field each time the model is run with the ‘random’ option selected.

The Tephra2 online simulation tool applies equations for particle diffusion, transport, and sedimentation to a set of user-supplied eruption parameters. After ejection from the vent, particles undergo column diffusion before being released into an atmosphere composed of a series of vertically stacked layers within which wind speed and direction are constant but between which they are allowed to vary. While falling, particles experience diffusion due to atmospheric turbulence and advection due to the wind before falling onto the land surface.

Atmospheric data required by the model can either be downloaded from the NCEP-DEO Reanalysis website directly (http://www.esrl.noaa.gov; Kanamitsu et al. 2002), obtained and formatted for use by the Windre online simulation tool (https://vhub.org/resources/windre), or typed into a text file that includes altitude (m a.s.l.), direction (0–360 degrees from north) and magnitude (m s-1) of the local wind field. The easting, northing, and elevation of the ground surface at which to make calculations are listed in a separate ‘grid’ file. The remaining parameters (e.g., maximum height of eruption column, total mass of tephra ejected, pyroclast density, size distribution of particles) can either be defined in a third text file or typed into the appropriate GUI field (Figure 2). Each file is uploaded to the Tephra2 graphical user interface. Execution time scales with the number of points in the grid file. Example atmospheric profiles, grids, and configuration files for three volcanoes are provided with the tool. Users may either alter the input parameters for these example eruptions or provide information for the eruptive scenario of their choice.

Graphical output is in the form of an isomass map (Figure 3), which allows the user to quickly visualize results of a calculation. The numerical output on which this map is based is also available for download. An example, calculated for Merapi volcano, Indonesia, is provided in the Appendix.

Figure 3
figure 3

Wind input to and graphical output from the Tephra2 model. Wind input taken from renalysis data for Nov 4, 2010. Contours represent kg m-2 tephra accumulation on the ground. Easting coordinates are displayed on the x axis, northing coordinates on the y axis. Isomass units are kg m-2. The map is automatically truncated to show only the locations where a user-defined minimum of tephra has accumulated, and thus may represent significantly less area than supplied with the input grid. Numerical output (not included, but available through the GUI) provides values for tephra accumulation at each grid point.

Simulating dry granular flows over natural terrain with Titan2D

Titan2D simulates dry granular avalanches over digital representations of natural terrain (Pitman et al. 2003; Patra et al. 2005). The program is based upon a depth-averaged model for an incompressible Coulomb continuum, a “shallow water” granular flow, based on the work of Savage and Hutter (1989), Iverson (1997), Iverson and Denlinger (2001), Denlinger and Iverson (2001) and Mangeney-Castelnau et al. (2002). This assumption is grounded in the fact that the flow thickness is small compared to the entire area over which a long-run-out flow travels and deposits material. A principal feature of the code is the incorporation of topographical data into the simulations and grid structure, combining numerical flow simulations with digital elevation data of natural terrain. A pre-processing routine allows digital elevation data to be imported. These data define a two-dimensional spatial box in which the simulation will occur. The raw data provide elevations at specified locations. Using these data, interpolating between data points where necessary, a rectangular Cartesian mesh is generated. Adaptive gridding allows for the concentration of computing power on a region of interest. Mesh refinement captures complex flow features at its leading edge, as well as locations where the topography changes rapidly. The conservation equations for mass and momentum are solved with a Coulomb-type friction term for the interactions between grains and between the granular material and the basal surface. Finally, the grid data are used, together with simulation output, in post-computation visualization (Yu et al. 2009; Charbonnier and Gertisser 20112012).

The Titan2D online simulation tool on Vhub can execute a complete simulation but it does not prepare the necessary digital elevation model (DEM) that Titan2D relies upon. Vhub offers an online conversion tool that puts a DEM into a format that the model can read and use (http://vhub.org/resources/dem4titan). A tutorial (http://vhub.org/resources/761) describes how to enter input parameters for Titan2D simulations on Vhub to run a simulation, and to visualize the results using the Titan2D viewer (https://vhub.org/tools/titanview). Within the Vhub environment, the Titan2D numerical algorithm, its GUI, and supporting software packages are all installed. The Titan2D GUI on Vhub (Figure 4) allows the user to provide data that determine the flow behavior. Code execution can occur either within the designated Vhub server hosted at Purdue (local execution in the GUI job submission tab), or on a large cluster hosted at the University at Buffalo and transparently linked to the Vhub architecture (the Hub-submit option in the GUI).

Figure 4
figure 4

Screenshot of the Titan2d Java-based graphical user interface (GUI) available within the online Vhub environment. From this GUI, the user can: (1) enter and save the different Titan2d input parameters, (2) run a Titan2d simulation and (3) monitor the progress of a simulation.

Output of the model can be visualized using the Titan2D viewer, which produces a map of flow depths overlaid on topography. One of the metrics used to evaluate the output of numerical simulations of this type is to calculate the ‘flow coverage match’, i.e. the correlation between actual and numerical flow coverage areas. The flow coverage match is defined by the region of mutual overlap (the intersection) divided by the total area of the combined numerical and field-mapped flow events (i.e. their union). Results obtained for one of the June 2006 pyroclastic flows at Merapi volcano show a flow coverage match of 54.4% (Figure 5). The details of this example are provided in the Appendix.

Figure 5
figure 5

Titan2D inundation map obtained from the simulation of a short-to-medium-runout block-and-ash flow (SM-BAF) at Merapi Volcano showing the distribution of the maximum flow depths after 120 seconds (see text for explanation). The red outline is the mapped extent of the lobe 5 BAF deposits emplaced in June 2006 (Charbonnier and Gertisser, 2012). The ‘flow coverage match’ is obtained by dividing the intersection area of the mapped and simulated inundation areas by their union area.

Remote sensing of SO2 emissions with OMI data and OMIplot

OMIplot (Carn 2011) is a software package designed to ingest, visualize and analyze SO2 (i.e. sulfur dioxide) and other trace gas data collected with OMI: a hyperspectral UV and visible spectrometer aboard NASA’s Aura spacecraft. Aura is part of the A-Train satellite constellation and operates in a sun-synchronous, near polar orbit at an altitude of ~705 km (Levelt et al. 2006a). Each OMI orbit has a swath width of 2600 km and pixel size of 13 × 24 km at nadir (Levelt et al. 2006b), allowing continuous global measurements of ozone and various other trace gases including SO2, nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and bromine monoxide (BrO) (Carn et al. 2007). In clear sky conditions, OMI can provide daily remote measurements of volcanic SO2 emissions if they exceed the sensor’s detection limit (Carn et al. 2008). Level 2 OMI SO2 (OMSO2) data files in HDF-EOS5 format are publicly available at no cost and downloadable from the NASA Goddard Earth Sciences Data and Information Services Center website (http://disc.sci.gsfc.nasa.gov/Aura/data-holdings/OMI/omso2_v003.shtml).

The functionality of OMIplot is specifically targeted to volcanologists, primarily for monitoring volcanic degassing and drifting eruption clouds. In particular, OMIplot can produce images of the SO2 vertical column density (VCD) and other measurements e.g. Aerosol Index over a user-defined geographic region and calculate the SO2 mass in volcanic plumes by integrating the SO2 VCDs over the plume area (Lopez et al. 2012). The software can also be used to generate temporal averages and summations of OMI SO2 measurements to improve signal-to-noise ratios, and to produce KMZ files for use with Google Earth. OMI SO2 algorithms are subject to continuous refinement and OMIplot is in a continual state of development. Support for additional OMI data products (including NO2, BrO, and aerosol) is being added to OMIplot, and a GNU Data Language (GDL) version is also forthcoming to permit online processing of OMI data in Vhub. Currently OMIplot is an offline tool on Vhub (Carn 2011) available for download and use on local machines, provided Interactive Data Language (IDL) version 6 or later is installed. Outputs of OMIplot show SO2 loading at different altitudes (Figure 6), as described in the Appendix.

Figure 6
figure 6

Plots of SO 2 VCD over Java, Indonesia on November 8, 2010 generated by OMIplot. Merapi volcano (central Java) is indicated by a triangle. (a) Lower troposphere (TRL) SO2 data; (b) Mid-troposphere (TRM) SO2 data; (c) Upper troposphere/lower stratosphere (STL) SO2 data. Gray regions denote data gaps, mostly due to meteorological clouds masking SO2 at lower assumed altitudes, and are more apparent in the TRL data due to the lower a-priori SO2 center of mass altitude. The OMI row anomaly can also result in data gaps (and hence SO2 mass underestimation) depending on the date and viewing geometry.

Summary and conclusions

This paper provides a brief overview of many of the capabilities of Vhub, such as collaboration within groups, the deployment of modeling tools, and examples of online and offline tools. Vhub is a knowledge-management-system aimed at facilitating collaborative efforts to better understand volcanoes and to more closely link observatory practitioners with external resources as they emerge from the research community, and non-observatory researchers with the monitoring data and knowledge generated within volcano observatories. Vhub provides a mechanism for volcanologists to share knowledge and tools, and to rapidly connect users with the resources they need, whether they be students, academics, or volcano observatory personnel.

At its core, Vhub is a community driven effort that is constantly evolving in terms of the resources available within the hub, the ways that those resources are used, and the underlying cyberinfrastructure (software and hardware) itself. For example, significant current effort is focused on re-engineering core modeling tools for mass flows and tephra dispersion in order to make them more flexible for changing concepts and user needs, and in implementation of probabilistic models. Vhub goes beyond the traditional, static web presentation to provide an interactive platform capable of promoting explosive developments in the field of volcanology and volcano risk mitigation.

Appendix

Details of modeling and analysis tool examples

This Appendix provides details on the examples of Vhub modeling and analysis tools that are summarized in the main paper, namely Tephra2, Titan2D, and OMIplot based upon eruptive activity at Merapi volcano in 2006 and 2010. Merapi is a basaltic-andesite stratovolcano located 28 km to the north of the city of Yogyakarta, Indonesia. It is one of the most active volcanoes in the world, with eruptions typically recurring every 4–6 years during the twentieth century (Surono et al. 2012). During March-June 2006, Merapi exhibited the extrusion and partial collapse of a lava dome, generating pyroclastic flows on the southwest and south flanks of the volcano. The activity peaked on June 14 with two dome-collapse derived block-and-ash flows that travelled 5 and 7 km on the south flank, respectively, destroying the village of Kaliadem located 4.5 km from the summit (Charbonnier and Gertisser 2009).

In late October and early November of 2010, Merapi volcano produced its most explosive eruption in over a century. The event was characterized by a series of tephra fallout events and pyroclastic flows. The climactic event occurred on 4–5 November, producing an eruption column that reached an altitude of 17 km and pyroclastic flows that travelled approximately 16 km from the volcano (Surono et al. 2012).

Tephra2

As an example exercise, we can model tephra fallout using parameters available for the 2010 eruption of Merapi volcano. The Tephra2 model can be used to investigate the likely pattern of tephra fallout from the sustained eruption column produced by Merapi volcano on November 4th. Note that this example is meant to outline the utility of the Tephra2 simulation tool and is not meant to provide a validated tephra fallout map for the eruption, an exercise that would require additional field data and post processing.

The volume of tephra deposits from the activity of Nov. 4th-5th is estimated as 107 m3 (Surono et al. 2012). Assuming a mean density of 1950 kg m-3 (Lube et al. 2011), this corresponds to a total erupted mass of 1.95 × 1010 kg. The maximum plume height of the cataclysmic eruption was 17000 m a.s.l. The grain sizes considered by the model are set to range from −3 to 6 phi with a median of 1.6 and a standard deviation of 1.7 phi. These values are based on analysis of seven samples of the 2010 tephra fall deposit (Charbonnier, unpublished data). Tephra2 will use these values to approximate the grain size distribution of the erupted material assuming a Gaussian distribution. A diffusion coefficient is used to take into account the spreading of the plume, the interaction of the plume with the atmosphere, and the variability of the atmospheric conditions; its value can range anywhere from 100 to greater than 10,000 m2s-1. A value of 2000 m2 s-1 is used in this example. Ideally, this parameter would be determined either from the dispersion of tephra on the ground or comparison with similar eruptions. The eddy diffusivity of the atmosphere is a constant, 0.4, and the number of steps into which to discretize the eruption column is set to 100. The fall time threshold allows the model to distinguish between dense (lithic) and light (pumice) particles, however for simplicity the density of both particle classes is set to the median density of 1950 kg m-3. The fall time threshold can then be set to an arbitrarily high value. The plume model is set to 0 to represent a well-mixed plume and the plume ratio is set to 0.33 so that no particles will be released from the lower third of the column. Volcano coordinates are entered as Easting and Northing (438752 m E, 916425 m N). The input grid is 200,000 m on each side with a spacing of 1000 m between grid points. Although topography in the area is quite variable, the elevation of the landing surface is set to a constant 600 m a.s.l. Using a grid of constant elevation insures that numerical calculations have closed form solutions. The input atmospheric profile (see Figure 3) is determined from Reanalysis data (Kanamitsu et al. 2002) for Merapi volcano for Nov. 4th 2010. Once this information is loaded into the GUI, the user presses the ‘simulate’ button and tephra accumulation, in mass per unit area, is calculated for each grid point. Numerical output (not included here) includes both the mass loading of particles on the ground (kg m-2) and the spatial distribution of the various particle sizes considered by the model. An isomass map is automatically generated, allowing users to quickly visualize results (Figure 3). For the Merapi example, isomass contours indicate that tephra particles settled to the west/northwest of the volcano, in general agreement with eyewitness accounts of plume dispersion. The atmospheric profile and configuration file used in the calculation are also available for download from the graphical user interface. If specified, the output can be saved onto the user’s account within Vhub, which can be later accessed using the Workspace online tool or WebDav. Further details of how to execute the Tephra2 online simulation tool, as well as details of the mathematical calculation, are included in the Tephra2 user manual. Additional material available for download include video tutorials explaining how to use the tool, Perl scripts to aid in the creation of input files and interpretation of output files, and a graduate level Tephra2 geocomputation assignment. Each of these is available from the ‘Supporting Docs’ section of the Tephra2 tool (https://vhub.org/resources/tephra2/supportingdocs).

Titan2D

As an example we simulate the generation and runout distance of a dense volcanic granular flow of ~106 m3 in volume on the southern flank of Merapi volcano (Figure 5). The simulation presented in this example intends to reproduce one of the short-to-medium-runout block-and-ash flows (SM-BAFs) that were emplaced during the June 2006 dome-collapse events at Merapi (Charbonnier and Gertisser 2009, 2012). Due to its average values of runout distance, area covered, and volume of the associated deposits within the whole range of SM-BAF deposits (Charbonnier and Gertisser 2009, 2011), the characteristics of lobe 5 (see Figure one in Charbonnier and Gertisser 2012) were taken as a reference for evaluation of the simulation outputs.

Before attempting to simulate a flow with Titan2D, data regarding its physical nature must be gathered. There are five main ways in which a user controls simulations using the online Titan2D GUI tabs (Figure 4):

  1. (1)

     Provide a 3D grid containing topographic information (e.g., a DEM for the simulation area) and entering this information into the ‘GIS’ tab of the GUI. Using the online DEM converter tool for Titan (Palma 2013b), the user can directly convert his/her own DEM from a Golden Software Grid file, an Arc/Info ASCII file, or GeoTIFF file to a Titan2D compatible GRASS format. DEMs with a spatial resolution of 30 m or better are desirable. The effect of DEM interpolation and sampling schemes on Titan2d model outputs is discussed in Stefanescu et al. (2012).

  2. (2)

     Defining dimensions of an initial “pile” of material (‘Piles’ tab) or a flux source (‘Flux Sources’ tab), which adds mass over a specified time period and area at a specified rate, including shape, footprint, height, volume, position and initial velocity (if required).

  3. (3)

     A variable that represents the angle of internal friction of the granular pile (‘Material map’ tab), which must be higher than the chosen bed friction angle. Analysis of input sensitivity and experience has shown that flows are relatively insensitive to the internal friction angle (Dalbey and Patra 2008).

  4. (4)

     A variable that represents the angle of bed friction between the granular pile and the substrate (‘Material map’ tab). This value is somewhat volume dependent (large volume flows require lower basal friction angles) and can be initially estimated from the Heim coefficient (height-dropped over runout, H/L) measured from natural deposits for a particular volcano, or taken from an H/L vs. volume plot. Using H/L vs. volume curves works well for simple channels, and provides a range of reasonable basal friction angles. For more complex terrain, ‘calibrating’ Titan2D by replicating natural deposits through trial and error, or employing material maps of varying friction may be required (Stinton et al. 2004; Charbonnier and Gertisser 2009, 2012). Simulated flow inundation is sensitive to the basal friction angle, and a range of inputs should be used to capture natural variability and uncertainty. A GIS-based classified material map (‘true’ option in the ‘Material map’ tab) which matches the area covered by the DEM can be used to define zones in the region where pronounced changes in the topographic surface (e.g., different substrates, slope breaks, and channel confinements and morphologies) result in a change in the bed friction angle.

  5. (5)

     Stopping criteria to halt the simulation (normally a limit on “maximum real time” or the maximum number of computational time steps) and other mass flow scaling parameters is entered in the ‘General’ tab of the GUI.

Once the GUI tabs have been filled for the DEM and mass flow parameters, the ‘Job Submission’ and ‘Job Monitor’ tabs allow the user to execute and monitor the Titan2d simulation within the Vhub environment. All Titan2D input and output data are saved and stored in the Vhub user’s personal ‘save’ directory specified in the ‘Load/Save’ tab of the GUI. Some of Titan2D’s outputs are flow depth and momentum over the whole computational domain (or DEM) at specified times, which can be used to compute field observable variables at different times during the flow including run-up height, inundation area, and velocity. Using the Titan2D viewer on Vhub (Palma 2012), the user can visualize the Titan2D standard outputs and/or output summary, plot an output parameter against time and/or display a map of the initial pile height, maximum height recorded during the simulation and/or a simulation variable at a particular computational time step. A ‘download’ option is available to download the current results to a new web browser window on the user’s desktop and create animations and/or movies.

For the Merapi example, the horizontal resolution of the DEM used is 15 m. The initial pile had a dome shape with a maximum depth of 10 m, with the base having major and minor axes of 100 and 70 m, respectively. A flux source of 50 s duration with a mean extrusion rate of 2.5 kg m-2 s-1 was added to the initial pile. The internal and bed friction angles were 30 and 25, respectively. Starting at rest, the granular material collapses and accelerates downslope until it reaches its maximum speed after 45 seconds (~45 m s-1).

According to this simulation, after descending the steepest slopes of the southeastern flank of the volcano, the Titan2D simulated flow hits the western side of Kendil hill after ~50 s, bends ~45° to enter the open slopes of the proximal Gendol valley and stops after ~120 s and 3.4 km run out distance (Figure 5).

OMIplot

Here we demonstrate the use of OMIplot to analyze OMI data collected during the November 2010 eruption of Merapi volcano (Java, Indonesia; Surono et al. 2012). Although OMIplot has been demonstrated to be a reliable tool for quantitative estimates of volcanic SO2 emissions (e.g. Thomas et al. 2011), in this example the emphasis is on the capabilities of OMIplot rather than the quantitative results.

Once launched in IDL, OMIplot offers several options, including ingest of a single OMI orbit, an entire day of OMI data (14–15 orbits) or automated processing of multiple days (dependent on data availability on the user’s system). Moreover, OMIplot can also process near-real time (NRT) OMSO2 data available within ~3 hours of the Aura overpass from NASA’s Land Atmosphere Near Real-Time Capability for EOS (LANCE) system (http://earthdata.nasa.gov/data/nrt-data/data-products/omi). In this example a single OMSO2 orbit from 8 November 2010 has been loaded.

The user enters the latitude and longitude ranges to plot, in this example a latitude −12:0 and longitude 104:115 are used. At this stage, the SO2 data may be filtered, either spatially or based on parameters such as the OMI-derived cloud fraction, reflectivity, and/or cloud pressure. The user must then select the desired retrieval algorithm, the Band Residual Difference (BRD) or Linear Fit (LF), for plotting. Other options related to the geometry of the plot are also available, such as plotting gridded (interpolated) data or actual OMI footprints, changing the map projection from the default (Mercator) and adjusting the map limits.

The user can choose to plot the locations of all or select active volcanoes in the area of interest (based on the Smithsonian Global Volcanism Program database, VOTW4.0, http://www.volcano.si.edu), as well as the locations of copper smelters (known to be strong point sources of SO2). Selecting a SO2 VCD scale from 0 to 2 Dobson Units (DU), examples of the resulting plots of the Lower Troposphere (TRL), Mid-troposphere (TRM) and Upper troposphere/lower stratosphere (STL) SO2 products are shown in Figure 6. The estimated SO2 mass is 26.63 kt at TRL with a maximum of 62.87 DU, 11.28 kt at TRM (max 22.16 DU), and 7.84 kt at STL (max 25.61 DU).

After plotting the software outputs SO2 mass data for the chosen geographic region, including total SO2 mass and maximum SO2 VCD. Options are available to analyze the SO2 cloud mass and emission rate, as well as to query individual pixels and measure distances. Plots can be exported in several formats, including KMZ, which is compatible with many of the most popular visualization programs and permits synoptic integration of the OMI data with the other simulation tools already available on Vhub.

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Acknowledgements

Vhub is supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation, through NSF Grant DRL 0940831. The Vhub development team includes, in addition to the authors: M.I. Bursik, E.S. Calder, S.M. Gallo, P. Johnson, M. Jones, J.V. Bajo, S. Melander, C. Renschler, A. Patra, J. Cortés, D. Moore-Russo, B. Pitman (University at Buffalo); C. Connor, L. Connor (University of South Florida); S. Carn, and W. Rose (Michigan Technological University). Numerous others in the volcanology community have contributed to the resources at Vhub.

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Correspondence to Jose L Palma.

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JLP developed tools and wrote the sections on general aspects of Vhub. LC implemented Tephra2 and related tools and documentation on vhub and wrote the corresponding sections of the paper. SC contributed sections on Titan2D. RT contributed sections related to remote sensing tools. GAV coordinated the Vhub project and the compilation of the manuscript, and co-wrote introductory sections with JLP. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

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Palma, J.L., Courtland, L., Charbonnier, S. et al. Vhub: a knowledge management system to facilitate online collaborative volcano modeling and research. J Appl. Volcanol. 3, 2 (2014). https://doi.org/10.1186/2191-5040-3-2

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