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Rotation, Strain, and Translation Sensors Performance Tests with Active Seismic Sources

Authors :
Felix Bernauer
Kathrin Behnen
Joachim Wassermann
Sven Egdorf
Heiner Igel
Stefanie Donner
Klaus Stammler
Mathias Hoffmann
Pascal Edme
David Sollberger
Cédric Schmelzbach
Johan Robertsson
Patrick Paitz
Jonas Igel
Krystyna Smolinski
Andreas Fichtner
Yara Rossi
Gizem Izgi
Daniel Vollmer
Eva P. S. Eibl
Stefan Buske
Christian Veress
Frederic Guattari
Theo Laudat
Laurent Mattio
Olivie Sèbe
Serge Olivier
Charlie Lallemand
Basil Brunner
Anna T. Kurzych
Michał Dudek
Leszek R. Jaroszewicz
Jerzy K. Kowalski
Piotr A. Bońkowski
Piotr Bobra
Zbigniew Zembaty
Jiří Vackář
Jiří Málek
Johana Brokesova
Source :
Sensors, Vol 21, Iss 1, p 264 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2021.

Abstract

Interest in measuring displacement gradients, such as rotation and strain, is growing in many areas of geophysical research. This results in an urgent demand for reliable and field-deployable instruments measuring these quantities. In order to further establish a high-quality standard for rotation and strain measurements in seismology, we organized a comparative sensor test experiment that took place in November 2019 at the Geophysical Observatory of the Ludwig-Maximilians University Munich in Fürstenfeldbruck, Germany. More than 24 different sensors, including three-component and single-component broadband rotational seismometers, six-component strong-motion sensors and Rotaphone systems, as well as the large ring laser gyroscopes ROMY and a Distributed Acoustic Sensing system, were involved in addition to 14 classical broadband seismometers and a 160 channel, 4.5 Hz geophone chain. The experiment consisted of two parts: during the first part, the sensors were co-located in a huddle test recording self-noise and signals from small, nearby explosions. In a second part, the sensors were distributed into the field in various array configurations recording seismic signals that were generated by small amounts of explosive and a Vibroseis truck. This paper presents details on the experimental setup and a first sensor performance comparison focusing on sensor self-noise, signal-to-noise ratios, and waveform similarities for the rotation rate sensors. Most of the sensors show a high level of coherency and waveform similarity within a narrow frequency range between 10 Hz and 20 Hz for recordings from a nearby explosion signal. Sensor as well as experiment design are critically accessed revealing the great need for reliable reference sensors.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14248220
Volume :
21
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Sensors
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7208b69e3ca440248020bb1dd61c73b2
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/s21010264