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Dive into the research topics where Angela Limare is active.

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Featured researches published by Angela Limare.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

An experimental study of the surface thermal signature of hot subaerial isoviscous gravity currents: Implications for thermal monitoring of lava flows and domes

Fanny Garel; Edouard Kaminski; S. Tait; Angela Limare

Received 22 July 2011; revised 23 November 2011; accepted 23 November 2011; published 7 February 2012. [1] Management of eruptions requires a knowledge of lava effusion rates, for which a safe thermal proxy is often used. However, this thermal proxy does not take into account the flow dynamics and is basically time-independent. In order to establish a more robust framework that can link eruption rates and surface thermal signals of lavas measured remotely, we investigate the spreading of a hot, isoviscous, axisymmetric subaerial gravity current injected at constant rate from a point source onto a horizontal substrate. We performed laboratory experiments and found that the surface thermal structure became steady after an initial transient. We develop a theoretical model for a spreading fluid cooled by radiation and convection at its surface that also predicts a steady thermal regime. We show that, despite the model’s simplicity relative to lava flows, it yields the correct order of magnitude for the effusion rate required to produce the radiant flux measured on natural lava flows. For typical thermal lava properties and an effusion rate between 0.1 and 10 m 3 s � 1 , the model predicts a steady radiated heat flux ranging from 10 8 to 10 10 W. The assessed effusion rate varies quasi-linearly with the steady heat flux, with much weaker dependence on the flow viscosity. This relationship is valid only after a transient time which scales as the diffusive time, ranging from a few days for small basaltic flows to several years for lava domes. The thermal proxy appears thus less reliable to follow sharp variations of the effusion rate during an eruption.


Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2016

A fluid dynamics perspective on the interpretation of the surface thermal signal of lava flows

Fanny Garel; Edouard Kaminski; S. Tait; Angela Limare

Abstract Effusion rate is a crucial parameter for the prediction of lava-flow advance and should be assessed in near real-time in order to better manage a volcanic crisis. Thermal remote sensing offers the most promising avenue to attain this goal. We present here a ‘dynamic’ thermal proxy based on laboratory experiments and on the physical framework of viscous gravity currents, which can be used to estimate the effusion rate from thermal remote sensing during an eruption. This proxy reproduces the first-order relationship between effusion rate measured in the field and associated powers radiated by basaltic lava flows. Laboratory experiments involving fluids with complex rheology and subject to solidification give additional insights into the dynamics of lava flows. The introduction of a time evolution of the supply rates during the experiments gives rise to a transient adjustment of the surface thermal signal that further compromises the simple proportionality between the thermal flux and the effusion rate. Based on the experimental results, we conclude that a thermal proxy can only yield a minimum and time-averaged estimate of the effusion rate.


PROCESSES IN ISOTOPES AND MOLECULES (PIM 2013) | 2013

Microwave-based laboratory experiments for internally-heated mantle convection

Angela Limare; Emanoil Surducan; Vasile Surducan; Camelia Neamtu; E. di Giuseppe; Kenny Vilella; Cinzia G. Farnetani; Edouard Kaminski; Claude Jaupart

The thermal evolution of terrestrial planets is mainly controlled by the amount of radioactive heat sources in their mantle, and by the geometry and efficiency of solid state thermo-chemical convection within. So far, these systems have been studied using numerical methods only and cross validation by laboratory analogous experiments has not been conducted yet. To fill this gap we perform the first laboratory experiments of mantle convection driven by microwave-generated internal heating. We use a 30×30×5 cm3 experimental tank filled with 0.5 % Natrosol in water mixture (viscosity 0.6 Pa.s at 20°C). The fluid is heated from within by a microwave device that delivers a uniform volumetric heating from 10 to 70 kW/m3; the upper boundary of the fluid is kept at constant temperature, whereas the lower boundary is adiabatic. The velocity field is determined with particle image velocimetry and the temperature field is measured using thermochromic liquid crystals which enable us to charaterize the geometry of the...


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

Microwave heating device for internal heating convection experiments, applied to Earth's mantle dynamics

Emanoil Surducan; Vasile Surducan; Angela Limare; Camelia Neamtu; E. Di Giuseppe

We report the design, construction, and performances of a microwave (MW) heating device for laboratory experiments with non-contact, homogeneous internal heating. The device generates MW radiation at 2.47 GHz from a commercial magnetron supplied by a pulsed current inverter using proprietary, feedback based command and control hardware and software. Specially designed MW launchers direct the MW radiation into the sample through a MW homogenizer, devised to even the MW power distribution into the samples volume. An adjustable MW circuit adapts the MW generator to the load (i.e., the sample) placed in the experiment chamber. Dedicated heatsinks maintain the MW circuits at constant temperature throughout the experiment. Openings for laser scanning for image acquisition with a CCD camera and for the cooling circuits are protected by special MW filters. The performances of the device are analyzed in terms of heating uniformity, long term output power stability, and load matching. The device is used for small scale experiments simulating Earths mantle convection. The 30 × 30 × 5 cm(3) convection tank is filled with a water‑based viscous fluid. A uniform and constant temperature is maintained at the upper boundary by an aluminum heat exchanger and adiabatic conditions apply at the tank base. We characterize the geometry of the convective regime as well as its bulk thermal evolution by measuring the velocity field by Particle Image Velocimetry and the temperature field by using Thermochromic Liquid Crystals.


Physics of Fluids | 2014

Recirculation cells in a wide channel

Hugo Chauvet; Olivier Devauchelle; François Métivier; Eric Lajeunesse; Angela Limare

Secondary flow cells are commonly observed in straight laboratory channels, where they are often associated with duct corners. Here, we present velocity measurements acquired with an acoustic Doppler current profiler in a straight reach of the Seine river (France). We show that a remarkably regular series of stationary flow cells spans across the entire channel. They are arranged in pairs of counter-rotating vortices aligned with the primary flow. Their existence away from the river banks contradicts the usual interpretation of these secondary flow structures, which invokes the influence of boundaries. Based on these measurements, we use a depth-averaged model to evaluate the momentum transfer by these structures, and find that it is comparable with the classical turbulent transfer.


PROCESSES IN ISOTOPES AND MOLECULES (PIM 2013) | 2013

Microwaves heating in a specific experimental configuration

Emanoil Surducan; Camelia Neamtu; Vasile Surducan; Angela Limare; Erika Di Giuseppe

In this research microwave heating is applied to analogous experiments modeling Earths mantle dynamics. This paper presents the experimental setup for laboratory convection experiments and the optimization procedure towards the desired result (i.e. uniform heating of the probe and long-term power stability). The schematic diagram of the microwaves power generator is detailed and presented together with the methods allowing to control the microwaves power stability. The biological protection of the users related to the microwaves leakage is also considered in the experimental setup design.


10TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE PROCESSES IN ISOTOPES AND MOLECULES (PIM 2015) | 2015

Microwave-based, internally-heated convection: New perspectives for the heterogeneous case

Angela Limare; L. Fourel; Emanoil Surducan; Camelia Neamtu; Vasile Surducan; Kenny Vilella; Cinzia G. Farnetani; Edouard Kaminski; Claude Jaupart

The thermal evolution of telluric planets is primarily controlled by the balance between internal heating - due to ra-dioactive decay - and effciency of convective heat transfer in their mantle. In the Earth, the problem is particularly complex due to the heterogeneous distribution of heat sources in the mantle and the non-linear coupling between this distribution and convective mixing. To tackle this issue, we have developed a new technology to produce internally-heated convection based on microwaves absorption. This technology has the unique capability to selectively heat different zones of a convective fluid (heterogeneous convection) through the careful control of the absorption properties of the different fluids. Here we illustrate with two examples the new geophysical perspectives offered by microwave-based internally-heated convection: the problem of lithosphere stability and the evolution of a hidden enriched reservoir in the lowermost mantle.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Low heat flux and large variations of lithospheric thickness in the Canadian Shield

F. Lévy; Claude Jaupart; J.-C. Mareschal; G. Bienfait; Angela Limare


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2013

Generation of continental rifts, basins, and swells by lithosphere instabilities

L. Fourel; Laura Milelli; Claude Jaupart; Angela Limare


Journal of Sedimentary Research | 2014

Experimental investigation on self-channelized erosive gravity currents

Pierre Weill; Eric Lajeunesse; Olivier Devauchelle; François Métiver; Angela Limare; Benoit Chauveau; Dominique Mouazé

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Edouard Kaminski

Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris

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Eric Lajeunesse

Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris

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Fanny Garel

University of Montpellier

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Claude Jaupart

Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris

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S. Tait

Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris

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François Métivier

Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris

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Olivier Devauchelle

Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris

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Cinzia G. Farnetani

Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris

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Meredith D. Reitz

University of Pennsylvania

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