Title: Roger Bowman
1Infrasound Data Holdings of the SMDC Monitoring
Research Program
- Roger Bowman
- National Science Foundation Infrasound Workshop
- Waikololoa, Hawaii
- July 24-25, 2003
The views and conclusions contained in this
document are those of the author and should not
be interpreted as representing official policies,
either express or implied of the U.S. Army Space
and Missile Defense Command or the U.S.
Government.
2Outline
- Infrasound network
- Infrasound waveform data availability
- Infrasound station descriptions
- Infrasound research database
3(No Transcript)
4Overview of Holdings
51-Year View of Holdings
61-Month View of Holdings
7Station Information
- Station maps
- Station description
- Station channel information
8Station Maps
9Station Regional Topographic Maps
10Sample Station Description IS55
- Location Windless Bight, Antarctica
- Latitude -77.7400
- Longitude 167.590
- Elevation 0.041 km
- Layout 8-element, inner triangle, outer pentagon
Sensor Type Model-5 Differential microbarometer
Sensor - Vendor Chaparral Physics
- Optimal Frequency Range 0.05 to 2.8 Hz
- Average Inner-sensor Spacing (inside) 0.175 km
- Average Inner-sensor Spacing (outside) 1.487 km
Filters - High frequency filters installed on each sensor
- Operated by University of Alaska
- Notes Significant microbarom activity Mt Erebus
volcano situated very close to array Centered
pentagon design has array response with little
aliasing
11Infrasound Research Database
- Contents
- Waveforms for Soviet nuclear explosions compiled
by Maxwell Technologies - Waveform collection of University of Alaska/
ENSCO - Nuclear explosions, volcanoes, earthquakes,
mountain associated waves, auroral waves, gravity
waves, etc. - Waveforms for other infrasound signals compiled
by SAIC - Chemical explosions, bolides, space shuttle
re-entries, etc. - Synthetic waveforms
- Metadata about the waveforms
12Infrasound Database Events
13Summary
- With support from SMDC, SAIC provides
- Current waveform data
- Research waveform databases
- Station descriptive data
- SAIC plans to provide these data to the
infrasound community in future years
14Infrasonic USArray
Rolling array of 400 infrasound stations!
4-sensor arrays with hose filters
1-sensor w/ or w/out hose filters
15Infrasonic Bigfoot Concept
- Use data channel(s) on seismic Bigfoot data
loggers - Mixed deployment of 4-element arrays and single
stations - Arrays allow signal coherence and azimuth
estimation, but - Arrays require larger investment (hardware,
station footprint, installation time, data
volume) - Single-sensor stations provide coverage for
investigating the spatial variability of high SNR
signals in more detail - Possible mixture 1 array for every 10 stations
- Could be adjusted to meet budget constraints or
research objectives
16Infrasonic Bigfoot Constraints
- Ensure that it remains a piggy back to solid
earth program - So that it doesnt crumble under its own weight
- Share data logger with seismic channels
- Avoid cost of separate data logger (may require
more channels than planned for seismic Bigfoot,
however) - Avoid costs of separate time standard (GPS)
- Avoid costs of managing separate data stream
- Limit array aperture to 100-200 m
- Avoid large footprint requiring extensive site
selection procedures - Avoid cost and OM for radio telemetry from array
elements - Maintain modest sampling rate (20-40 Hz?)
- Avoid infrasonic data volumes that become
significant relative to seismic data, but - Dont throw the baby out with the bath water