lava at
Mauna Loa in 1984 There are two major groupings of eruptions: effusive and explosive. Effusive eruption differs from
explosive eruption, wherein
magma is violently fragmented and rapidly expelled from a volcano. Effusive eruptions are most common in basaltic magmas, but they also occur in
intermediate and
felsic magmas. These eruptions form
lava flows and
lava domes, each of which vary in shape, length, and width. Deep in the crust, gasses are dissolved into the magma because of high pressures, but upon ascent and eruption, pressure drops rapidly, and these gasses begin to exsolve out of the melt. A volcanic eruption is effusive when the erupting magma is
volatile poor (water, carbon dioxide,
sulfur dioxide, hydrogen chloride, and hydrogen fluoride), which suppresses fragmentation, creating an oozing magma which spills out of the volcanic vent and out into the surrounding area. For an effusive eruption to occur, magma must be permeable enough to allow the expulsion of gas bubbles contained within it. If the magma is not above a certain permeability threshold, it cannot degas and will erupt explosively. Additionally, at a certain threshold, fragmentation within the magma can cause an explosive eruption. This threshold is governed by the
Reynolds number, a dimensionless number in
fluid dynamics that is directly proportional to fluid
velocity. Eruptions will be effusive if the magma has a low ascent velocity. At higher magma ascent rates, the fragmentation within the magma passes a threshold and results in explosive eruptions.
Silicic magma also exhibits this transition between effusive and explosive eruptions, but the fragmentation mechanism differs. == Basaltic eruptions ==