Аннотация
Based on Sentinel-1A satellite images acquired between 01.05 and 22.09.2023, the differential interferometry method (DInSAR) calculated successive displacement fields in time, which clearly show a dome-shaped uplift on the western slope of the Shiveluch volcano, 8–8.5 km west of its active crater. Uplift was especially intense at the satellite acquisition intervals 01.05–13.05.2023, 13.05–25.05.2023 and 25.05–06.06.2023. To test the hypothesis about formation of a displacement area due to magma injection under the western slope of the volcano, numerical modelling was carried out and parameters of magmatic body like a sill were determined, which forms the displacements on the surface that best match the displacement observed from satellite radar interferometry data. It is assumed that after the eruption on 11.04.2023 magma rose from a depth of 20–25 km through a fissure formed under the western slope of the volcano and penetrated horizontally under the slope at a depth of 1–2 km in the north-northwest direction. Within the precision of data on slope displacements, the size of the magma body varies from 6.0 х 3.0 km at 1 km depth, to 5.25 x 1.4 km at 2 km depth, while its height ranges from 0.5 to 1.75 m and its volume from 0.009 to 0.0129 km3. Thus, based on radar interferometry data in combination with the data on the distribution of seismic activity accompanying the magma movement, the model of the magmatic body that penetrated under the western slope of Shiveluch volcano in the postparoxysmal phase of the eruption on 11.04.2023 was constructed. The Formation of a new extrusive dome on the western slope of Shiveluch volcano at the end of April 2024 confirms the hypothesis about injection of magmatic material under the western slope of the volcano and allows to estimate the rate of magma rise to the surface.