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ShakeNet recent

Aller au niveau supérieur
Automatic listing of recent uploads to the site. Sorting is by modification date. See also "recent changes" portlet (top right).
How much is 1 gal?
Explanation of the unit "gal" or "galileo" = 1cm/s^2
2004.10.23 Mw6.6 Niigata, Japan
Magnitude 6.6 # Date-Time Saturday, October 23, 2004 at 08:56:00 (UTC) = Coordinated Universal Time # Saturday, October 23, 2004 at 5:56:00 PM = local time at epicenter Location 37.226°N, 138.779°E Depth 16 km (9.9 miles) set by location program Region NEAR THE WEST COAST OF HONSHU, JAPAN Distances 80 km (50 miles) SSW of Niigata, Honshu, Japan 85 km (50 miles) NE of Nagano, Honshu, Japan 95 km (60 miles) NNW of Maebashi, Honshu, Japan 195 km (120 miles) NNW of TOKYO, Japan Location Uncertainty horizontal +/- 3.6 km; depth fixed by location program Parameters Nst=724, Nph=724, Dmin=91.1 km, Rmss=1.07 sec, Gp= 37°, M-type=teleseismic moment magnitude (Mw)
Animation of 2004 mid-Niigata earthquake seismic wave propagation
After main-shock. 900KB
Hazards and risk
 
Misc info
 
Development
Folder for all hardware and software development items. All content in this folder and below is readable by authenticated users only.
Prototype
Discussions regarding the first Shakenet system prototype
Group on Earth Observations, GEO
GEO is an organization dedicated to developing and instituting a Global Earth Observation System of Systems, or GEOSS. GEOSS will build on and add value to existing Earth-observation systems by coordinating their efforts, addressing critical gaps, supporting their interoperability, sharing information, reaching a common understanding of user requirements, and improving delivery of information to users.
ShakeNet recent
Automatic listing of recent uploads to the site. Sorting is by modification date. See also "recent changes" portlet (top right).
CITRIS - Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society
The Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society (CITRIS) creates information technology solutions for many of our most pressing social, environmental and healthcare problems. The first public-private partnership created to use IT in this way, CITRIS partners more than 300 faculty and thousands of students from myriad departments at four UC campuses (Berkeley, Davis, Merced and Santa Cruz) with industrial researchers from over 60 corporations. Together they are thinking about IT in ways that have not been thought of before. They see solutions to many of the concerns that face all of us today, from the environment and finding viable sustainable energy alternatives to healthcare delivery and developing secure electronic medical records and remote diagnosis, ultimately boosting economic productivity. CITRIS represents a bold and exciting vision that is leveraging one of the top university systems in the world with highly successful corporate partners and government resources.
ShakeNet Products: ShakeMaps
What can be produced by ShakeNet data?
Satellite telemetry
Do we need back-up telemetry when cell network fails? How can we keep it cheap? Should we use Argos, Globalstar, Iridium?
Power supply
Solar panels, rechargeable batteries, once-only batteries, power minimization
Microcontroller
Commercial choices, linux or not, development costs
First deployment
Location? Pros & cons of India (Dehra Dun), Nepal (Kathmandu), Bangladesh. Schedule? Contacts?
Accelerometry
What are the design requirements for a strong-motion sensor?
Overview
Overview and ShakeNet instrument
Sun SPOT strong motion demo
Telemetry of simulated "strong ground motion" recorded by a Sun SPOT located several metres from the base station and relayed over ZigBee.
Our Sun SPOTs: #2
Photo of our recently purchased Sun SPOTs hooked to Colin's laptop.
Our Sun SPOTs: #1
Photo of our recently purchased Sun SPOTs. Cell phone for scale.
Sun SPOT
Java smart sensor project home page
Nepal cell phone news
Latest telecoms info from Nepal relayed by Cellular News
Pathfinder group
Pathfinder Group is a services conglomerate with interests which include Trading, Counter-trade; Security Guard Services, Cash-in-Transit (CIT) Services; Electronic Security Services (Radio-based Alarm Systems, CCTV, Satellite Vehicle Tracking); Courier Services; an On-line Gift Shop; due diligence, Investigations, Credit / Antecedent / Employee / Data Verification, Debt Recovery, Assets Re-possession; Food Services; publishing Magazines, etc
Mobilink GSM
Pakistan Mobile Communications Limited
Mobilink GSM: Wikipedia
Wikipedia entry on Mobilink GSM, also known as Pakistan Mobile Communications Limited, the biggest cell provider in Pk. Apparently also holders of the J&K concession.
Paktel
Pakistani cell phone company
Airtel
Indian cell phone company
Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd
Indian cell phone company
New Kerala news item
Army sets up own mobile network in Jammu and Kashmir
Crossbow Motes
The Crossbow processor/radio boards, more commonly known as motes, allow multiple sensors distributed over a wide area to wirelessly transmit their data back to a base station attached to a computer. The motes run the operating system TinyOS, which handles power, radio transmission and networking transparent to the user. The network formed is adhoc, meaning the motes figure out how to form the most efficient network by themselves. The network also supports multihopping, allowing a mote out of range of the base station to pass its information from mote to mote until the data reaches the base station. With these tasks in place, you can concentrate on building sensing applications.
Wireless sensor network
Wikipedia: A wireless sensor network (WSN) is a wireless network consisting of spatially distributed autonomous devices using sensors to cooperatively monitor physical or environmental conditions, such as temperature, sound, vibration, pressure, motion or pollutants, at different locations.The development of wireless sensor networks was originally motivated by military applications such as battlefield surveillance. However, wireless sensor networks are now used in many civilian application areas, including environment and habitat monitoring, healthcare applications, home automation, and traffic control...
Swarm intelligence
Wikipedia: Swarm intelligence (SI) is an artificial intelligence technique based around the study of collective behavior in decentralized, self-organized systems. The expression "swarm intelligence" was introduced by Beni & Wang in 1989, in the context of cellular robotic systems...
Parallax micro-controllers
Cheap micro-controllers from Parallax: BASIC Stamp modules
SeisMac
SeisMac is a Mac OS X application that turns your MacBook or MacBook Pro into a seismograph. It access your laptop's Sudden Motion Sensor in order to display real-time, three-axis acceleration graphs. Version 2.0's enhancements make SeisMac an even more valuable tool for classroom demonstrations of seismic concepts and techniques. The resizable, real-time scrolling display shows an enormous amount of acceleration information. Place your laptop on a table and see the seismic waves from tapping your toe on the floor. Lay your laptop on your chest and see your heartbeat. And of course, if there is a real earthquake, SeisMac will be displaying full seismic information while you drop, cover and hold-on.
UniMotion
This is the home of UniMotion, a library for detecting motion detection using the SMS sensor found in various Apple portables. UniMotion is based on Motion with support for additional hardware coming from here. On top of all this, I've created a basic API and implemented probing so that you don't have to know what machine you're on. While Motion has a BSD license, UniMotion is released under the LGPL. The original author and all contributors have given permission for this license change. The intent is to ensure that fixes and improvements aren't hoarded by closed-source projects and to ensure that closed-source programs utilising UniMotion are able to support the newest hardware models, even without support from the vendor. There is software out there that is SMS-aware but doesn't support my MacBook Pro. If everyone uses UniMotion, that will never happen again.
Argos
Argos is a unique worldwide location and data collection system dedicated to studying and protecting the environment. Argos helps the scientific community to better monitor and understand our environment, but also helps industry to comply with environmental protection regulations implemented by various governments. To meet system use requirements, all programs using Argos have to be related in some way or form to environmental protection, awareness or study, or to protecting human life. Applications for which a clear governmental interest prevail are also approved.
GSM: Wikipedia
The Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM: originally from Groupe Spécial Mobile) is the most popular standard for mobile phones in the world. GSM service is used by over 2 billion people across more than 212 countries and territories.[1][2] The ubiquity of the GSM standard makes international roaming very common between mobile phone operators, enabling subscribers to use their phones in many parts of the world. GSM differs significantly from its predecessors in that both signaling and speech channels are Digital call quality, which means that it is considered a second generation (2G) mobile phone system. This fact has also meant that data communication was built into the system from the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP).
GPRS: Wikipedia
General Packet Radio Service (GPRS) is a mobile data service available to users of GSM and IS-136 mobile phones. GPRS data transfer is typically charged per megabyte of transferred data, while data communication via traditional circuit switching is billed per minute of connection time, independent of whether the user has actually transferred data or he has been in an idle state. GPRS can be utilized for services such as WAP access, SMS and MMS, but also for Internet communication services such as email and web access. In the future, it is expected that low cost voice over IP will be made available in cell phones.
Frame relay: Wikipedia
In the context of computer networking, frame relay (also found written as "Frame-relay") consists of an efficient data transmission technique used to send digital information quickly and cheaply in a relay of frames to one or many destinations from one or many end-points. Network providers commonly implement frame relay for voice and data as an encapsulation technique, used between local area networks (LANs) over a wide area network (WAN). Each end-user gets a private line (or leased line) to a frame-relay node. The frame-relay network handles the transmission over a frequently-changing path transparent to all end-users.
AnalogDevices iMEMS Accelerometers
15 years ago, Analog Devices revolutionized automotive airbag systems with its unique iMEMS® (integrated Micro Electro Mechanical System) technology. iMEMS accelerometers were the first products in an array of MEMS inertial sensor solutions to use innovative design techniques to integrate small, robust sensors with advanced signal conditioning circuitry on a single chip. Today, ADI offers the industry's broadest accelerometer portfolio, with products addressing a range of user needs including high performance, low power consumption, integrated functionality, and small size.
EEProductCenter review of ADXL330 accelerometer
By Gina Roos, 10/31/2005.
Project: Tumbleweed - JPL Polar Rover Project
The Tumbleweed Rover, currently under development at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, California, is a large, wind-blown, inflated ball, which carries an instrument payload in its interior. Such rovers offer an effective and simple means of gathering data over large spatial extents of Earth, Mars, and other solar system bodies. Tumbleweeds could prove to be a safe and economical way of deploying instruments such as a ground penetrating radar or a magnetometer in numerous hostile environments. The latest version of the rover was recently deployed in Greenland, where it completed a more than 100km autonomous traverse across an ice sheet. Communicating via the Iridium satellite network, the rover in question successfully and reliably relayed live GPS, temperature, and pressure data to a ground station at JPL for nearly ten days. The follow-on rover is currently being readied for a traverse from the South Pole to the coast of Antarctica some 2000km away. The Antarctic test, to take place in February of 2004, will obtain mapping data in collaboration with the ADD project of the British Antarctic Survey to demonstrate Tumbleweed's effectiveness in harvesting data in extreme and remote settings.
Project: Greenland glacier cameras
Alberto's recent project to help monitor a glacier front in Greenland. The sensors are cameras/weather stations with Iridium satellite telemetry.
2007.03.25 Mw6.7 Wajima, Japan
Magnitude 6.7 # Date-Time Sunday, March 25, 2007 at 00:41:57 (UTC) = Coordinated Universal Time # Sunday, March 25, 2007 at 9:41:57 AM = local time at epicenter Time of Earthquake in other Time Zones Location 37.275°N, 136.603°E Depth 5 km (3.1 miles) set by location program Region NEAR THE WEST COAST OF HONSHU, JAPAN Distances 80 km (50 miles) N of Kanazawa, Honshu, Japan 140 km (85 miles) NNE of Fukui, Honshu, Japan 155 km (95 miles) WNW of Nagano, Honshu, Japan 335 km (210 miles) WNW of TOKYO, Japan Location Uncertainty horizontal +/- 5.6 km (3.5 miles); depth fixed by location program Parameters Nst=114, Nph=114, Dmin=164.4 km, Rmss=0.85 sec, Gp= 43°, M-type=moment magnitude (Mw), Version=9 Source USGS NEIC (WDCS-D) Event ID us2007aiae
LandScan 2005
GIS processing of LandScan 2005 gridded population and other data
 

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