“…Previous conceptual understanding of acoustic signals from explosive eruptions has tended to focus on two endmember signal durations: (1) discrete explosion (blast) waves with relatively simple waveforms lasting from several to tens of seconds (e.g., Firstov and Kravchenko, 1996;Ripepe and Marchetti, 2002;Johnson, 2003;Marchetti et al, 2009Marchetti et al, , 2013 and (2) sustained, broadband, infrasonic tremor signals lasting from minutes to hours (e.g., Vergniolle and Caplan-Auerbach, 2006;Caplan-Auerbach et al, 2010). Commonly, the discrete explosion signals are simply called "explosions" in the volcano acoustics literature and they have been modeled, using linear equivalent source theory, as acoustic monopoles, that is, sources represented as time-varying mass fluxes (e.g., Woulff and McGetchin, 1976;Firstov and Kravchenko, 1996;Johnson, 2003;Delle Donne and Ripepe, 2012;Johnson and Miller, 2014).…”