Steve Cole
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0918
stephen.e.cole@nasa.gov
Alan Buis
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena,
Calif.
818- 354-0474
alan.d.buis@jpl.nasa.gov
WASHINGTON -- The space-based technology
that lets GPS-equipped motorists constantly update their precise location will
undergo a major test of its ability to rapidly pinpoint the location and
magnitude of strong earthquakes across the western United States. Results from
the new Real-time Earthquake Analysis for Disaster (READI) Mitigation Network
soon could be used to assist prompt disaster response and more accurate tsunami
warnings.
The new research network builds on
decades of technology development supported by the National Science Foundation,
the Department of Defense, NASA, and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). The
network uses real-time GPS measurements from nearly 500 stations throughout
California, Oregon and Washington. When a large earthquake is detected, GPS
data are used to automatically calculate its vital characteristics including
location, magnitude and details about the fault rupture.
"With the READI network we are
enabling continued development of real-time GPS technologies to advance
national and international early warning disaster systems," said Craig
Dobson, natural hazards program manager in the Earth Science Division at NASA
Headquarters in Washington. "This prototype system is a significant step
towards realizing the goal of providing Pacific basin-wide natural hazards
capability around the Pacific 'Ring of Fire.'"
Accurate and rapid identification of
earthquakes of magnitude 6.0 and stronger is critical for disaster response and
mitigation efforts, especially for tsunamis. Calculating the strength of a
tsunami requires detailed knowledge of the size of the earthquake and
associated ground movements. Acquiring this type of data for very large
earthquakes is a challenge for traditional seismological instruments that
measure ground shaking.
High-precision, second-by-second
measurements of ground displacements using GPS have been shown to reduce the
time needed to characterize large earthquakes and to increase the accuracy of
subsequent tsunami predictions. After the capabilities of the network have been
fully demonstrated, it is intended to be used by appropriate natural hazard
monitoring agencies. USGS and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration are responsible for detecting and issuing warnings on
earthquakes and tsunamis, respectively.
"By using GPS to measure ground
deformation from large earthquakes, we can reduce the time needed to locate and
characterize the damage from large seismic events to several minutes,"
said Yehuda Bock, director of Scripps Institution of Oceanography's Orbit and
Permanent Array Center in La Jolla, Calif. "We now are poised to fully
test the prototype system this year."
The READI network is a collaboration of
many institutions including Scripps at the University of California in San
Diego; Central Washington University in Ellensburg; the University of Nevada in
Reno; California Institute of Technology/Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in
Pasadena; UNAVCO in Boulder, Colo.; and the University of California at
Berkeley.
NASA, NSF, USGS, and other federal,
state, and local partners support the GPS stations in the network, including
the EarthScope Plate Boundary Observatory, the Pacific Northwest Geodetic
Array, the Bay Area Regional Deformation Array and the California Real-Time
Network.
"The relatively small investments
in GPS-based natural hazards systems have revolutionized the way we view the
Earth and allowed us to develop this prototype system with great potential
benefits for the infrastructure and population in earthquake-prone states in
the western United States," said Frank Webb, Earth Science Advanced
Mission Concepts program manager at JPL.
The READI network is the outgrowth of
nearly 25 years of U.S. government research efforts to develop the capabilities
and applications of GPS technology. The GPS satellite system was created by the
Department of Defense for military and ultimately civil positioning needs. NASA
leveraged this investment by supporting development of a global GPS signal
receiving network to improve the accuracy and utility of GPS positioning
information. Today that capability provides real-time, pinpoint positioning and
timing for a wide variety of uses from agriculture to Earth exploration.
"Conventional seismic networks have
consistently struggled to rapidly identify the true size of great earthquakes
during the last decade," said Timothy Melbourne, director of the Central
Washington University's Pacific Northwest Geodetic Array. "This GPS system
is more likely to provide accurate and rapid estimates of the location and
amount of fault slip to fire, utility, medical and other first-response
teams."
The GPS earthquake detection capability
was first demonstrated by NASA-supported research on a major 2004 Sumatra quake
conducted by Geoffrey Blewitt and colleagues at the University of Nevada in
Reno.
For more information about NASA
programs, visit http://www.nasa.gov.
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