基于电缆的地球物理测量和监测系统,海啸预警的新可能性

G. Schmitz, W. Rutzen, W. Jokat
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引用次数: 2

摘要

2004年12月发生在苏门答腊岛的灾难性海啸表明,当今的工业基础设施是多么脆弱,而且几乎没有针对居住在海岸线上的人口的风险管理。从历史上看,大多数政府一直忽视地震及其后果(火灾、基础设施破坏)可能造成的破坏。今天,只有少数大城市有地震学网络来监测其所在或附近断层系统的地震活动。过去,科学在理解导致地震的构造过程方面进展甚微,地震预测仍然是一个遥远的希望。这是缺乏陆上基础设施的直接后果,无法记录地震前、地震中和地震后重要物理参数的变化。对于大型转换断层系统的海上部分,情况甚至更糟,对于俯冲带更是如此。这些地区是世界上构造最活跃的地区,对太平洋沿岸、东印度洋和地中海沿岸的国家构成了被低估的威胁。很少或根本没有采取合理的预防措施来实时监测这些地区的地震活动,因此人们对地震的风险知之甚少。现代海洋光纤电缆是海上监测阵列联网的最佳方式。地球物理传感器可以直接集成或放置在特殊的套管中。此外,为了降低环境噪音,在海底下几厘米的地方铺设这种电缆是工业上的标准程序。对于地震活动性研究,地震仪、检波器和水听器将是首选的仪器。为了确定地震的位置,这种传感器必须以一种特定的已知方式布置在电缆的末端或额外的连接处。此外,微型传感器可以集成到电缆的某些位置。根据最近的研究,我们知道沿近海构造构造的地震活动性比陆上仪器所能探测到的要高几个数量级。因此,根据目前的知识,海洋断层/俯冲系统的相关性和风险可能被低估了。类似的论点也适用于海底活火山。在这里,大型山体滑坡会引发局部海啸。根据其布局,电缆系统还可以作为沿俯冲带、海底火山或其他地质构造的海啸预警系统,其优点是决策者可以实时获得所有波形/传感器信息。总而言之,这种海底观测站对科学的影响将是重大的,它提供了预测问题的能力,例如,在计划近海建设的地方。这些观测站可以让我们更详细地了解俯冲带的动力学。一段时间后,这一见解可能会让人们重新审视一些沿海地区的风险。因此,从科学的观点来看,海洋光纤电缆(例如电信电缆)最好配备间隔固定的检波器/水听器。电信公司的额外成本不会很大,但如果数据的分发可以组织起来,科学效益将是巨大的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Cable-Based Geophysical Measurement And Monitoring Systems, New Possibilities For Tsunami Early-Warnings
The disastrous tsunami off Sumatra in December 2004 showed how vulnerable today's industrial infrastructure is, and that almost no risk management for populations living at the coastlines exists. Historically, most governments have continuously ignored the possible destruction caused by earthquakes and their consequences (fire, destruction of infrastructure). Today, only a few mega cities have a seismological network to monitor seismicity on the fault systems they lie on or near. Science has made little progress in the past in understanding the tectonic processes leading to earthquakes and earthquake predictions remain a distant hope. This is a direct consequence of the lack of onshore infrastructure capable of recording the changes in important physical parameters before, during and after an earthquake. The situation is even worse for the offshore parts of large transform fault systems, or even more important for subduction zones. These zones are the tectonically most active regions of the world, and represent an underestimated threat to coastal countries bordering the Pacific, the eastern Indian Ocean and the Mediterranean. Few or no reasonable precautions have been taken to monitor the seismicity of these regions in real time, and thus the risk of them is very poorly understood. Modern marine fiber-optic cables are the best way of networking offshore monitoring arrays. Geophysical sensors can be directly integrated or placed in a special casing. Furthermore, the deployment of such cables even a few decimeters below the seafloor to lower the ambient noise is a standard procedure in industry. For seismicity studies, seismometers, geophones and hydrophones will be the preferred instrumentation. In order to locate the position of an earthquake, such sensors have to be arranged at the end or in extra junctions of the cable in a specific and known manner. Furthermore, miniaturized sensors can be integrated into the cable at certain locations. From recent studies, it is known that the seismicity along offshore tectonic structures is several magnitudes higher than can be detected with onshore instruments. Thus, given present knowledge, the relevance of and risk from marine fault/subduction systems is likely to be underestimated. Similar arguments count for active submarine volcanoes. Here, large landslides can produce local tsunamis. Depending on its layout, a cable system can also serve as a tsunami early warning system along subduction zones, submarine volcanoes or other geological structures with the advantage that all waveforms/sensor information are available to decision makers in real time. To sum up, the impact of such submarine observatories on science would be significant providing the capability to predict problems where -for example- offshore constructions are planned. These observatories might allow a more detailed insight into the dynamics of subduction zones. This insight might provide, after some time, a fresh look at the risk for some coastal areas. From a scientific point of view, it would be desirable, therefore, for marine fiber-optic cables (for example telecommunication cables) to be equipped with regularly spaced geophones/hydrophones. The extra costs for the telecommunication companies would not be significant, but the scientific benefit will be enormous, providing the distribution of the data can be organized.
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