Satellites use ripples in space to detect tsunamis
Scientists plan to use GPS to track 'internal gravity waves' in atmosphere

By Michael Reilly
Discovery News

8/6/2010 9:44:43 AM ET

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/38591746/ns/technology_and_science-science


Tsunamis are born in the violent interaction of two simple ingredients: 
rock and water. Outer space would seem like the last place to put an 
instrument designed to detect one of these potentially devastating waves.

But a new study proposes to do just that, using global positioning 
system (GPS) satellites already in orbit.

According to Lucie Rolland of the Institute of Geophysics of Paris 
(IPGP) in France and a team of researchers, tsunamis produce "internal 
gravity waves" in the atmosphere — waves of energy that ripple up 
through the sky. High above the Earth in the ionosphere, these waves 
jostle electrons and charged particles in a distinct pattern that GPS 
satellites can pick up.

As a rule, the strong quakes required to generate trans-ocean tsunamis 
like the ones we saw in the Indian Ocean in 2004 and in the Pacific 
Ocean earlier this year are rare. But when they do happen, getting a 
speedy, accurate warning out can save thousands of lives.

The research team looked at the 2004 tsunami, one generated off Peru 
following a magnitude 8.2 quake off Peru, and the Chilean tsunami in 
February. For each wave, satellites measured a discernible gravity wave 
signature in the ionosphere within a couple of hours of tsunami formation.

With a dense network of GPS satellites over the Pacific, the team 
believes they've found a useful new way to issue tsunami warnings. 
Current warning systems include mid-ocean buoys, sea floor pressure 
gauges, and land-based measurements of seismic activity. Together they 
do a very good job of identifying whether a wave has been generated, and 
how big it is.

But there is always room to get better, and the use of this and other 
experimental new techniques (tsunamis are even thought to generate their 
own underwater electrical currents that could be used to improve 
warnings, for example) could one day change tsunamis from disasters than 
can kill hundreds of thousands of people to waves that we worry about, 
but know how to elude.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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