Title: International Federation of Digital Seismograph Networks
1International Federation of Digital Seismograph
Networks
- The FDSN
- is the organization that brings together the
digital broad-band seismographic networks
throughout the world - has commission status within IASPEI, the
International Association of Seismology and
Physics of the Earths Interior, and IUGG, the
International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics
(ICSU) - was established in 1986 (20 years !) to support
the establishment of new digital broad-band
seismographic technology, primarily for
scientific network. - as many national networks moved and are moving to
digital technology, FDSN has assumed the
coordination role among all modern seismographic
networks worldwide - is not an inter-governmental organization
2Federation of Digital Seismic Networks
- The FDSN
- promotes the installation of modern digital
broad-band stations over 2400 BB digital
stations globally today, over 1000 openly
available in real-time telemetry - coordinates global activities in station site
selection, data exchange, and instrumentation
standardization - promotes inter-operability among infrastructures
- promotes a variable-geometry approach, with a
backbone of over 300 globally distributed,
high-quality stations, enhanced by a mosaic of
national and regional networks - promotes the deployment of ocean-bottom seismic
observatories, in cooperation with other
international ocean programs (ION), to complement
the coverage of land-based seismic instrumentation
3Federation of Digital Seismic Networks
- The FDSN
- maintains an advanced system of networked data
centers to oversee the collection, archive and
distribution of the continuous and event
waveforms, with primary FDSN archive at IRIS DMS - promotes open-data access all FDSN member
networks agree to open-data availability each
member contributes at least one station to the
global archive and most members allow open access
to waveform data at their data centers - promotes real-time access to data
- provides global monitoring of one of the most
important natural hazards - earthquakes - and
shares the GEOSS goal of achieving a global
strategy for coordinated Earth observation FDSN
is a GEO participant, building the land-based
component for one of the priority targets for the
GEOSS 10-yr implementation plan
4FDSN Structure
- Chairman and Secretary
- ExeCom
- SteerCom
- Working Groups I. Station Siting and
Instrumentation - II. Data Exchange
- III. Software Coordination
- IV. CTBT Coordination
- V. Portable instrumentation
- Annual assemblies
- Regional assemblies
5FDSN Products
6FDSN Membership
- EUROPE
- ASN ZAMG Austria
- BNN BAS-GI Bulgaria
- CZNET IPE-GI Czech Rep.
- DSN KMS Denmark
- GEOSCOPE IPGP France
- FBSN ReNaSS France
- GEOFON GFZ Germany
- GRSN-GRF BGR Germany
- NOA Greece
- HNSN GGRI Hungary
- IMO Iceland
- MEDNET INGV Italy
- INSN INGV Italy
- NIBN OGS Italy
- NORSAR Norway
- ORFEUS KNMI Netherlands
- NSN KNMI Netherlands
- PLSN IGFPAN Poland
ASIA PACIFIC OCEAN AN AGSO
Australia RSSC-NAA Azerbaijan Dubai CDSN-NCDSN
CSB China IG-ASG Georgia Indonesia IIEES
Iran ISN GII Israel PACIFIC 21 ERI
Japan NIED Japan MSN MMD Malaysia GeoNet
GNS New Zealand BATS IES Taiwan IG-AST
Tajikistan TMD Thailand PTWC Pacific Ocean
AMERICAS CNSN GSC Canada SBA U.deChile
Chile IG EPN Ecuador Jamaica MNSN UNAM
Mexico PRSN UPR Puerto Rico SCSN
Caltech/USGS USA BDSN U.Berkeley USA GSN
IRIS USA ANSS USGS USA AFRICA ENSN NRIAG
Egypt South Africa Africarray African
continent
7FDSN coverage 2005
8FDSN expanding coverage in 2006-2007
9196 out of 300 available online at the FDSN
primary archive in DMS
10Regional versus global
- The future Earth coverage will depend
increasingly on regional and national networks - These - are supported for surveillance and alert,
- - often have more stable budget and recognition
- - are less interested in technical developments
- - require real-time data availability and
processing - - are less strict about VBB standards
- - participate less in FDSN activities
- - rarely have science under their mandate
- Extreme challenge to organize an efficient data
exchange - National priorities and requirements,
restrictions to data access
11Waveforms for global warnings
12Seismic stations in the Euro-Mediterranean
46 countries 150 infrastructures 800 BB
stations 1800 SP stations 3000 SM stations
13Global hyerarchical Net.DC
14International organizations in seismology
- The issue of who can represent the seismological
community in the various international frameworks
has become a very important one. - Seismology is not covered under the mandate of
any inter-governmental organization (i.e. WMO,
IOC, UNESCO) - IASPEI is within the ICSU framework
- FDSN is a voluntary club
- ISC is a focused organization with one single
mandate - National centers offer sometimes a global
coverage, notably NEIC/USGS - Regional centers (EMSC, ORFEUS) play indeed a
regional role - Global networks (GSN/IRIS, GEOFON, GEOSCOPE) are
science-driven and science-supported, although
some shift is ongoing after Sumatra - No international agency is responsible for
earthquake warning or hazard - CTBTO is an integovernmental organization, with a
single mandate - WMO is evaluating if it should bring seismology
back under its mandate
15GEOSS
- The Group on Earth Observation (GEOSS) signed by
60 countries and 40 participating organizations
in 2005, approving the GEOSS (Global Earth
Observation System of Systems) 10-yr plan - Mandate coordination of the Earth observing
systems, integration of space-based and in-situ
segments, North-South technology transfer - UN-style structure Committees and WGs
Secretariat at WMO Plenary Assembly once per
year 106 Tasks 2-yr, 6-yr and 10-yr goals - Integration with various international
organizations and consortia CEOS, GGOS, IGOS,
GOS, GOOS, GTOS, GCOS, GLOSS, IGBP, IGOL, GARS,
NCRP, IOC, IGFA - FDSN is a participating organization, GSN a
national system, GSN/FDSN a global system, DMS a
national and global system - Strong top-level involvement of NOAA and USGS,
but little concrete involvement in activities so
far - Global representation for seismology secured by
strong commitment of FDSN Chairman, FDSN ExeCom
and GSN chair
16Priorities 2006-2007
- Designated Chairman G. Suarez, UNAM
- Designated Secretary T. vanEck, ORFEUS
- Definition agenda 2007-2011
- Reform WG-I and WG-II, improve availability of
information, - Improve access to real-time data, complete
geographical coverage - GEO
- Initiate discussion on the representation of the
seismological community -
17(No Transcript)
18A FDSN mandate for more structural support ?
- Data mining for structure
- Receiver functions, Phase velocity maps
- Establish reference models and standards
- Synthetics and simulations
- Global coordination of temporary deployments
- Global role in capacity building
- Data mining for hazard
- Structure, empirical Green functions, attenuation
laws - Rapid source parameters, early warning
- Structured access to HPC
- Code benchmarking
- Open source and community support
19Capacity building
- A comprehensive strategy of capacity building
must tackle all aspects and all users, from the
more basic to the more advanced - Progress in global seismology will stall unless a
more comprehensive approach to data access is
pursued, including local capacity building - IRIS and EARTHSCOPE data and facilities should
exploit their potential for advancement in SHA - IRIS has a global mandate for seismology
representation - The long-term strategy of IRIS should consider a
wider mandate for structural support to seismology
20Managed Products
- Earthquake Catalogs
- Hypocenters
- Magnitudes
- Moment tensors
- Waveform Products
- FARM/SPYDER
- Record Sections
- Maps
- Station Lists
- Response curves
- Tomography
- Velocity models
- Visualizations
- SeismoArchives
- Scanned images of historic recordings