European Commission logo
español español
CORDIS - Resultados de investigaciones de la UE
CORDIS

Ocean-Bottom Distributed Acoustic Sensors: new tools for Underwater Seismology

Descripción del proyecto

Un registro de los terremotos submarinos

Los sismómetros son capaces de detectar y registrar ondas producidas incluso por los terremotos de menor magnitud. Los sismómetros de fondo oceánico contribuyen al estudio de la sismicidad marina, pero resultan caros y su utilidad está limitada por la velocidad de los requisitos de la transmisión de los datos y la duración de las baterías. El proyecto financiado con fondos europeos Ocean-DAS desarrollará una alternativa rentable para vigilar la sismicidad en zonas remotas del océano. Retroadaptará los cables de fibra óptica utilizados en telecomunicaciones Con una unidad optoelectrónica en el cabo del cable en tierra se podrían vigilar cincuenta kilómetros o más de superficie con una resolución de miles de puntos de medición.

Objetivo

One of the greatest outstanding challenges in seismology is the sparsity of instrumentation across Earth’s oceans. Poor spatial coverage results in biases and low-resolution regions in global tomography models as well as significant location uncertainty for offshore seismicity. Also, the lack of significant seismic instrumentation offshore makes it more complicated to have reliable early warning systems capable of mitigating some of the disastrous consequences of tsunamis. Ocean-bottom seismometers (OBS) are indeed available, but they are generally very expensive and limited by rapid data telemetry and battery life except in near-shore environments. The aim of this proposal is to provide a low-cost deployable solution (basically inexistent so far) for monitoring seismicity in remote areas of the ocean. The idea would be to retrofit existing telecommunication optical fiber cables lying in the ocean and transform them (with no basic change in the cable itself) into powerful seismic sensing arrays. With a single optoelectronic unit in the end of the cable (onshore), a full span of 50 km or more could be monitored, with thousands of measuring points interrogated. The proposed solution would be much cheaper than current alternatives and could easily allow deploying a large number of these sensor arrays, particularly in currently unmonitored areas. Moreover, all the fibre-optic cables used worldwide for communications are suitable for our proposed sensor, hence the same installation methodology could be exported to a large number of scenarios. The proposed solution has been pinpointed by prestigious seismology laboratories worldwide (Caltech Seismology Lab, GFZ Postdam, GeoAzur Nice) as a system with a great potential for adoption in the seismological field. A suitable demonstrator will be developed along the project and will be field tested in collaboration with GeoAzur Nice, in an underwater cable in the coast of Greece.

Institución de acogida

UNIVERSIDAD DE ALCALA
Aportación neta de la UEn
€ 150 000,00
Dirección
PLAZA DE SAN DIEGO
28801 Alcala De Henares/Madrid
España

Ver en el mapa

Región
Comunidad de Madrid Comunidad de Madrid Madrid
Tipo de actividad
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Enlaces
Coste total
Sin datos

Beneficiarios (1)