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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: large earthquakes + broadcast warnings + earthquake  Related to the article below (Last Update: 5/13/2008)

Will cyclone unleash change in Myanmar?
Chicago Tribune, United States - May 6, 2008
The government, warned by Indian authorities of the storm's approach, broadcast limited televised warnings, but those failed to reach many in the storm's ...
Source: Google News

[PDF] Real-time seismology and earthquake hazard mitigation -
H Kanamori, E Hauksson, T Heaton - Nature, 1997 - ecf.caltech.edu
... Data Integration project) to broadcast earthquake data in ... sequence of the 1989
earthquake in Loma ... When large aftershocks occurred, this system provided about ...
-

Real-Time Seismology And Earthquake Damage Mitigation -
H Kanamori - Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 2005 - Annual Reviews
... no warning is warranted despite the large PK3s ... the continuously evolving real-time
estimates broadcast by the ... only a few stations to locate earthquakes within a ...

An Automatic Processing System for Broadcasting Earthquake Alarms -
S Horiuchi, H Negishi, K Abe, A Kamimura, Y … - Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 2005 - Seismol Soc America
... An Automatic Processing System for Broadcasting Earthquake Alarms ... Hz velocity seis-
mometers, this means that earthquakes with M 5 will have large errors in ...

Earthquake prediction: a critical review -
RJ Geller - Geophysical Journal International, 1997 - Blackwell Synergy
... where the understanding of earthquakes has become an ... Before two large recent quakes,
the government confidently issued public warnings and evacuated ...

One minute after: Strong-motion map, effective epicenter, and effective magnitude -
T Teng, L Wu, TC Shin, YB Tsai, WHK Lee - Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 1997 - Seismol Soc America
... For a large event with a finite rupture surface ... An Automatic Processing System for
Broadcasting Earthquake Alarms Bulletin ... on an Onsite Early Warning Method for ...

Quick and reliable determination of magnitude for seismic early warning -
YM Wu, TC Shin, YB Tsai - Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 1998 - Seismol Soc America
... within 30 sec of a large earthquake that could ... Currently, the system can routinely
broadcast the location and magnitude of a strong earthquake as well as ...

… analysis of strong-motion accelerograms and its application to earthquake early-warning systems -
G Grecksch, HJ Kumpel - Geophysical Journal International, 1997 - Blackwell Synergy
... The damage zone of large earthquakes may extend up to several hundred ... a pilot project
called CUBE (Caltech/USGS Broadcast of Earthquakes) to provide real ...

THE NEW TSUNAMI WARNING SYSTEM OF THE JAPAN METEOROLOGICAL AGENCY -
H TATEHATA - Perspectives on Tsunami Hazard Reduction: Observations, …, 1997 - books.google.com
... information, as soon as a large earthquake occurs ... 1. seismic intensity in Japan,
2. earthquake epicenter and ... This information is broadcast via the GMS4 satellite ...

6 Optimal, Real-time Earthquake Location for Early Warning -
C Satriano, A Lomax, A Zollo, II Federico, I … - Springer
... is al- ready constrained by a large number of ... An Automatic Processing System for
Broadcasting Earthquake Alarms ... The crywolf is- sue in earthquake early warning ...

Istanbul Earthquake Rapid Response and the Early Warning System -
M Erdik, Y Fahjan, O Ozel, H Alcik, A Mert, M Gul - Bulletin of Earthquake Engineering, 2003 - Springer
... Potential impact of large earthquakes on urban societies can ... org/shake/,
Caltech-USGS Broadcast of Earthquakes ... Earthquake Early Warning in urban and industrial ...

Source: Google Scholar

Large earthquakes may broadcast warnings, but is anyone tuning in to listen?

Like geological ninjas, earthquakes can strike without warning. But there may be a way to detect the footfalls of large earthquakes before they strike, alerting their potential victims a week or more in advance. A Stanford professor thinks a method to provide just such warnings may have been buried in the scientific literature for over 40 years.

In October, Japan instituted a nationwide earthquake warning system that heralds the advance of a big earthquake; its sophisticated machinery senses the shaking deep in the earth and transmits a warning signal that can beat the tremors to the surface by seconds.

Antony Fraser-Smith, professor emeritus of electrical engineering and of geophysics, has evidence that big temblors emit a burst of ultra-low-frequency electromagnetic radio waves days or even weeks before they hit. The problem is that nobody is paying enough attention.

Fraser-Smith has been interested in electromagnetic signals for decades. Most of these waves come from space, he said, generated in the upper atmosphere by the sun and then beamed down to Earth.

In 1989, Fraser-Smith and his research team were monitoring ultra-low-frequency radio waves in a remote location in the Santa Cruz Mountains as part of a long-term study of the signals reaching Earth from space. On Oct. 5, 1989, their equipment suddenly reported a large signal, and the signal stayed up for the next 12 days. At 2:00 p.m. on Oct. 17, 1989, the signal jumped even higher, about 20 to 30 times higher than what the instruments would normally ever measure, Fraser-Smith said. At 5:04 p.m. the 7.1 magnitude Loma Prieta earthquake hit the Monterey Bay and San Francisco Bay areas, killing 63 people and causing severe damage across the region.

Fraser-Smith originally thought there was something wrong with the equipment. After ruling out the possibility of technical malfunctions, he and his research team started to think the Loma Prieta quake had quietly announced its impending arrival, and that their equipment just happened to be in the right place at the right time to pick up the message.

"Most scientists necessarily make measurements on small earthquakes because that's what occurs all the time," Fraser-Smith said. "To make a measurement on a large earthquake you have to be lucky, which we were."

Along with Stephen Park, earth sciences professor at the University of California-Riverside, and Frank Morrison, professor emeritus of earth and planetary science at UC-Berkeley, Fraser-Smith continued to study the phenomenon of earthquakes emitting electromagnetic waves through a study funded by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS).

When the USGS terminated the funding in 1999, he decided to move on to other things. But he was recently drawn back into this issue by a local private company that wanted to use his methods to develop earthquake warning systems.

"I took a new look at the measurements, concentrating entirely on large earthquakes," Fraser-Smith said, "and all of a sudden I could see the forest through the trees."

He found three other studies describing electromagnetic surges before large earthquakes, just as he had found at the Loma Prieta site. The earliest report was from the Great Alaska earthquake (M9.2) in 1964. Up until now, most of the focus for earthquake warnings and predictions has been on seismological studies, but no seismic measurements have ever shown this kind of warning before a big quake, Fraser-Smith said.

This technique will probably only yield results for earthquakes of approximately magnitude 7 or higher, because background waves from the atmosphere will tend to mask any smaller signals. But these are the quakes people are most concerned about anyway, from a safety and damage point of view.

Some seismologists are suspicious that these results are real, Fraser-Smith said. But it would take little effort to verify or disprove them. He is calling for federal funding for a mission-oriented study that would place approximately 30 of the ultra-low-frequency-detecting instruments around the world at hotspots for big quakes. It would cost around $3 million to buy 30 of these machines, he said, which is cheap compared to the cost of many other large studies.

Every year, there are on average 10 earthquakes of magnitude 7 or higher around the world. So within just a few years, he said, you could potentially have 10 new measurements of electromagnetic waves before big quakes-surely enough to determine whether the previous four findings were real.

###

Fraser-Smith will present his findings at the American Geophysical Union meeting this week in San Francisco. His talk is scheduled for 8:45 a.m. Thursday, Dec. 13.

 
 
 
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