🌋 Earth Science · Volcanology
📅 March 2026⏱ 12 min🟢 Beginner-friendly

Volcano Eruption Physics: Magma, Pressure & Pyroclastic Flows

A volcano erupts when dissolved gases in magma nucleate into bubbles, increasing pressure until the magma shatters into fragments travelling faster than sound, or — if the magma is fluid enough — erupts quietly as rivers of lava. The same physics governs a champagne bottle and a supervolcano.

1. Magma Composition & Viscosity

Magma is molten rock derived from the mantle or melting of crustal material. Its composition — specifically its silica (SiO₂) content — is the single most important factor controlling eruption style:

Magma viscosity (approximate): Type SiO₂ % Viscosity (Pa·s) Temp (°C) Character ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── Basalt 45-52 10–100 1,100-1,200 Low-viscosity, runny Andesite 52-63 10³–10⁵ 950-1,100 Intermediate Dacite 63-68 10⁵–10⁸ 800-1,000 High-viscosity, sticky Rhyolite 68-77 10⁸–10¹² 700-900 Extremely viscous Compare: water = 10⁻³ Pa·s, honey = 10-100 Pa·s, asphalt = 10⁸ Pa·s High silica → long Si-O polymer chains → high viscosity → trapped gases → explosions Low silica → depolymerised melt → low viscosity → easy degassing → effusive eruption

2. Volatile Exsolution

Magma deep underground is under enormous lithostatic pressure — at 5 km depth: P ≈ ρgh = 2,700 × 9.81 × 5,000 ≈ 130 MPa. At these pressures, water, CO₂, and SO₂ remain dissolved in the melt (like CO₂ in a sealed soda bottle).

As magma rises toward the surface:

  1. Pressure decreases below the saturation pressure of the dissolved gases
  2. Bubbles nucleate — first on crystal surfaces (heterogeneous nucleation)
  3. Bubbles grow as gas exsolves and diffuses into them
  4. In low-viscosity basalt: bubbles rise, coalesce, and escape gently → effusive eruption
  5. In high-viscosity rhyolite: bubbles cannot escape. They grow until the magma fragments into pyroclasts — a sudden decompression wave propagates down the conduit at near-sonic speeds → explosive eruption
The champagne analogy: A champagne bottle under 6 atm pressure has CO₂ fully dissolved. Shake it (nucleation sites), uncork it (decompression), and dissolved gas violently exsolves, fragmenting the liquid into foam. A rhyolitic eruption is exactly this — but the "foam" travels at hundreds of m/s and the "bottle" is 5 km tall.

3. Effusive vs Explosive Eruptions

Effusive (Low Viscosity)

Hawaiian shield volcanoes (e.g., Kīlauea, Mauna Loa) erupt fluid basaltic lava. Lava lakes, lava tubes, and lava flows extending tens of kilometres are typical. Lava flows advance at 1–50 km/h — dangerous for property but rarely lethal if evacuation occurs. The 2018 Kīlauea eruption destroyed 700 homes over 3 months.

Strombolian (Intermediate)

Discrete explosions every few minutes as large gas slugs burst at the surface. Produces lava bombs, scoria, and ash. Named after Stromboli volcano (Sicily), which has been nearly continuously active for 2,000+ years — the "Lighthouse of the Mediterranean."

Plinian (High Viscosity)

The most powerful and dangerous. A continuous jet of gas and pyroclasts erupts at 100–700 m/s, forming an eruption column that can reach 40 km into the stratosphere. Named after Pliny the Elder, who died observing the 79 AD Vesuvius eruption. Other examples: Pinatubo 1991 (column 40 km high), Krakatoa 1883.

4. The VEI Scale

VEIVolume (m³)Column heightDescriptionExample
0<10⁴<100 mNon-explosiveKīlauea effusive
210⁶1-5 kmExplosiveGaleras, Colombia
310⁷3-15 kmSevereRuapehu NZ 1995
410⁸10-25 kmCataclysmicEyjafjallajökull 2010
510⁹>25 kmParoxysmicMount St Helens 1980
610¹⁰>25 kmColossalPinatubo 1991
710¹¹>25 kmSuper-colossalTambora 1815
810¹²>25 kmMega-colossalToba ~74,000 BP

The VEI scale is logarithmic: each unit represents a 10× increase in erupted volume. VEI 8 events ("supervolcano" eruptions) are rare (~2 in 100,000 years) but can trigger volcanic winters lasting years and deposit ash over continents. The Toba eruption ~74,000 years ago may have reduced human population to ~10,000 individuals.

5. Pyroclastic Flows & Surges

Pyroclastic density currents (PDCs) are the most lethal volcanic hazard. They form when the eruption column collapses or a lava dome fails explosively, sending a mixture of hot gas (200–700°C), ash, and rock fragments flowing at 100–700 km/h.

Pyroclastic flow dynamics: Density at source: ρ ≈ 10-100 kg/m³ (much less than water ~1,000 kg/m³) Flow temperature: 200–700°C Flow speed: 100–700 km/h (up to 200 m/s) Momentum equation (simplified, down slope): ρ·dv/dt = ρ·g·sinθ − k·v² θ = slope angle k = basal friction parameter Energy: A 1 km³ PDC descending 1,500 m has kinetic energy: E_k = ½·m·v² ≈ ½ × (5×10¹¹ kg) × (150 m/s)² ≈ 5.6×10¹⁵ J ≈ 1.3 megatonnes of TNT equivalent

PDCs killed ~28,000 people in the 1902 Mt Pelée (Martinique) eruption — nearly the entire population of the city of Saint-Pierre — in under 2 minutes. Survivors included a shoemaker in a cellar and a prisoner in a thick-walled stone dungeon.

6. Secondary Hazards

7. Eruption Forecasting

Unlike earthquake prediction, eruption forecasting is feasible over hours to weeks because magma migration leaves observable precursors: