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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-02-01
    Description: Much debate within the weather, climate, disaster mitigation, and insurance communities centers on whether rising sea-surface temperatures in the North Atlantic Ocean due to anthropogenic global warming are resulting in discernible trends in hurricane frequency or energy. However, some of the apparent increase in hurricane frequency may be due to the recent availability of aircraft- and satellite-based observations. A possible approach to this issue is via microseisms, seismic signals traditionally thought of as noise because they are not generated by earthquakes. These surface waves generated by ocean storms are detected even in continental interiors far from source regions. Here we show that the August 1992 Saffir/Simpson category 5 Hurricane Andrew can be detected using microseisms recorded at the Harvard, Massachusetts, seismic station even while the storm is as far as [~]2000 km away and still at sea. When applied to decades of existing analog seismograms, this methodology could yield a seismically identified hurricane record for comparison to the pre-aircraft and pre-satellite observational record.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2012-02-01
    Description: We present a comprehensive study of the Earth’s gravest spheroidal modes excited by the Maule, Chile, earthquake of 27 February 2010, using uninterrupted time series extending over a minimum of 19 and a maximum of 93 days. For each of 101 station–mode combinations, we use the formalism of Stein and Geller (1977) to compute the relative excitation of the 2l+1 singlets in the relevant geometry and obtain an estimate of the seismic moment by best fitting the observed spectrum to that of the resulting synthetic computed for the same recording window. The average results for seven spheroidal and two radial modes deviate no more than 12% from the Global Centroid Moment Tensor moment of 1.86×1029??dyn?·???cm, with no evident trend with frequency. In other words, we fail to document an ultralow-frequency component (expressed as an increase of moment with period) in the source of the 2010 event. This result indicates that such components are not universal features of megaquakes, even though they had been documented for the 1960 Chilean, 2004 Sumatran, and 1964 Alaskan events (the only three events with larger moments in the past 50 years). In this respect, the 2010 earthquake is most comparable to the slightly smaller 2005 Nias event, which incidentally also featured a bilateral rupture.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
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