"Although about 800 million people live within 100 kilometres of a volcano, very few of these potential natural hazards are monitored consistently. But emerging methods are now enabling researchers to keep a constant eye on volcanoes".
The researchers "created a neural network that has churned through more than 30,000 Sentinel-1 images of more than 900 volcanoes and flagged about 100 images for closer examination. By getting an algorithm to do the initial work of sorting through the data, researchers save time that they can better spend following up on volcanoes of interest".
The researchers use "radar observations from two satellites that make up the European Sentinel-1 mission. Depending on their location as they orbit Earth, the craft collect data on the world’s volcanoes every 6, 12 or 24 days. As they repeatedly pass over the same spot, the satellites measure the distance between themselves and the ground."
The results showed that 39% were true positives - correct detections of ground distortions. "The team is also training its neural network on synthetic data generated from simulated eruptions. That work roughly doubled the precision of the algorithm."