Frederik Simons, at Princeton University, will discuss this international effort during the marine seismoacoustics session of the 178th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America. The presentation will be given Friday, Dec. 6 at 9:30 a.m. in Empress Room of the Hotel del Coronado in San Diego.
“We are hunting for the deep source of mantel plumes, which bring to the surface hot volcanic material from great depth,” said Simons. “What happens inside [the Earth] is all part of the plate-tectonic cycle [that gives] us energy. I see it as both as an opportunity and as a threat.”
The floating array offers an advantage over traditional land-based seismic stations. The floating sensors gather data spanning many angles of Earth’s interior, producing a massive CAT scan like reading of seismic activity for the planet.
According to Simons, this effort offers insight into the buoyancy, viscosity, density and temperature of the deep mantel plume as deep as 700 kilometers below Earth’s surface. This depth produces a potential barrier for material flowing from the lower into the upper mantel. The relayed information provides the scientific community precise measurements of the propagation speeds of seismic waves traveling through the plume.
The sensors, released in the Pacific Ocean, have a life span of five years. Each device was designed to drift passively, as well as sink to a depth of 3,000 meters. The sensors, which can relay information to scientists in near real time through a satellite link, consists of a hydrophone to capture seismic information, a GPS to annotate location accurately and a unit to digitize and process wavelet detection of the seismic activity underwater.
The array forms the backbone of the South Pacific Plume Imaging and Modeling program, an international effort managed by scientists from China, France, Japan and the United States.
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Simons’ presentation 5aAO4, “EarthScope-Oceans: An Array of Floating MERMAID Instruments for Earthquake Seismology,” will be at 9:30 a.m. PT, Friday, Dec. 6, in the Empress room of the Hotel del Coronado in San Diego.
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The Acoustical Society of America (ASA) is the premier international scientific society in acoustics devoted to the science and technology of sound. Its 7,000 members worldwide represent a broad spectrum of the study of acoustics. ASA publications include The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America (the world’s leading journal on acoustics), Acoustics Today magazine, books, and standards on acoustics. The society also holds two major scientific meetings each year. For more information about ASA, visit our website at http://www.acousticalsociety.org.
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