A “vortex ring” that was puffed out by Mount Etna on July 23. (Image credit: Luca Cosma)
Europe’s most active volcano, Mount Etna, is blowing scores of ethereal “vortex rings” every day from a single vent located in one of its most active craters.
On July 23, Boris Behncke, a volcanologist with Italy’s National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology who is based in Sicily alongside Mount Etna, wrote on Twitter that the volcano had been “releasing dozens of gas rings” from a single vent in Bocca Nuova crater for around a week and shows no signs of stopping.
Vortex rings are made from a mix of smoke, steam and other gases released from volcanic vents at high speeds. They can remain airborne for several minutes before eventually disappearing.
Photographer Luca Cosma, who also runs the tour company Etna Hiker, snapped a series of stunning pictures of the vortex rings on July 23 while escorting a group to the Bocca Nuova crater.
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A group of hikers watches a vortex ring form. (Image credit: Luca Cosma)
“Such gas rings are produced by the explosion of gas bubbles within a narrow conduit [above a magma chamber], which shoots the gas at high speed toward the surface,” Behncke wrote on Twitter. “Attrition along the conduit walls slows the movement of the gas jet, relative to the center of the conduit,” which is what forms the ring shape, he added.
Mount Etna produces more vortex rings than any other volcano in the world, Behncke wrote. The Sicilian volcano spits out the gaseous loops most years, but the number of the rings varies every year. In 2000, the volcano released around 5,000 — the most on record — and the current rate is similar to that period, he added.
Vortex rings have also been observed at other volcanoes, such as Mount Stromboli, which sits on an island just north of Sicily. But they are rare elsewhere.
A series of vortex rings that shot out of the Bocca Nuova Crater in quick succession. (Image credit: Luca Cosma)
The secret to Etna’s vortex rings is likely the shape of the conduit below the vent inside the Bocca Nuova crater. In a study published Feb. 9 in the journal Scientific Reports, researchers simulated vortex rings using a computer model and found that perfect rings required “a combination of fast gas release from gas bubbles at the top of the magma conduit and regularity in the shape of the emitting vent.”
Vortex rings are not the only unusual signs of activity recently spotted at Mount Etna. On July 20, a new vent opened up in the Bocca Nuova crater, Behncke wrote on Twitter. This hole is known as a “breathing vent,” because gas appears to rhythmically pulse out of the opening as if it were breathing. Two minor eruptions, which briefly spit out small clouds of ash, were also spotted at the volcano’s Southeast Crater on July 10 and July 14, according to Volcano Discovery, a site that tracks volcanic eruptions.
However, none of the recent activity means that a major eruption is imminent, Behncke wrote.
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Harry is a U.K.-based staff writer at Live Science. He studied Marine Biology at the University of Exeter (Penryn campus) and after graduating started his own blog site “Marine Madness,” which he continues to run with other ocean enthusiasts. He is also interested in evolution, climate change, robots, space exploration, environmental conservation and anything that’s been fossilized. When not at work he can be found watching sci-fi films, playing old Pokemon games or running (probably slower than he’d like).
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