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tullio
Joined: 22 Jan 05
Posts: 2118
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3 Jul 2006 17:34:28 UTC
Topic 191511
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Which would be the effect of an earthquake om LIGO, GEO600, VIRGO and other laser interferometers? Could they be used to monitor distant earthquakes?
Tullio
Which would be the effect of an earthquake om LIGO, GEO600, VIRGO and other laser interferometers? Could they be used to monitor distant earthquakes?
Tullio
earthquake is a very large and big wave and what we are looking for are very short and fast spikes. So the answer is no
Not really relevant, but I like to look at recent earthquake activity here
Actually that link is quite relevant. That earthquake page is one the main webpages that we use for tracking down sources of problems in the IFO (like losing lock). As it happens I just spent a week down at LIGO Livingston observatory as a Scimon so tracking earthquakes was one of my jobs. There are a lot of earthquakes in Alaska that have an effect on the IFOs but if there is a earthquake bigger that 5.0 it will likely have an effect no matter where it is. There are several seismometers at the LIGO sites that make it very easy to know when an earthquake is affecting the data.
Quote:
Which would be the effect of an earthquake om LIGO, GEO600, VIRGO and other laser interferometers? Could they be used to monitor distant earthquakes?
Earthquakes will cause the sensitivity of the IFOs to go down and sometimes even break lock, but the IFOs are built so the earthquakes and other sources of noise have as little impact on the data as possible. They are very poor earthquake detectors.
Earthquakes
)
earthquake is a very large and big wave and what we are looking for are very short and fast spikes. So the answer is no
But you could use the
)
But you could use the interferometer to monitor earthquakes if you want to :)
Not really relevant, but I
)
Not really relevant, but I like to look at recent earthquake activity here
Dead men don't get the baby washed. HTH
RE: Not really relevant,
)
Actually that link is quite relevant. That earthquake page is one the main webpages that we use for tracking down sources of problems in the IFO (like losing lock). As it happens I just spent a week down at LIGO Livingston observatory as a Scimon so tracking earthquakes was one of my jobs. There are a lot of earthquakes in Alaska that have an effect on the IFOs but if there is a earthquake bigger that 5.0 it will likely have an effect no matter where it is. There are several seismometers at the LIGO sites that make it very easy to know when an earthquake is affecting the data.
Earthquakes will cause the sensitivity of the IFOs to go down and sometimes even break lock, but the IFOs are built so the earthquakes and other sources of noise have as little impact on the data as possible. They are very poor earthquake detectors.