Publication | Closed Access
Optical polarization–based seismic and water wave sensing on transoceanic cables
287
Citations
39
References
2021
Year
EngineeringSeismic WaveOceanographyFiber OpticsGeophysical Signal ProcessingEarth ScienceGeophysicsOptical PropertiesLos AngelesOcean InstrumentationEarthquake EngineeringSeismic ImagingFiber Optic SensingFiber OpticSeismologySeismic Reflection ProfilingTsunami SensingTransoceanic CablesSeafloor Geophysical Instrumentation
Seafloor geophysical instrumentation is challenging to deploy and maintain but critical for studying submarine earthquakes and Earth's interior. Emerging fiber-optic sensing technologies that can leverage submarine telecommunication cables present an opportunity to fill the data gap. We successfully sensed seismic and water waves over a 10,000-kilometer-long submarine cable connecting Los Angeles, California, and Valparaiso, Chile, by monitoring the polarization of regular optical telecommunication channels. We detected multiple moderate-to-large earthquakes along the cable in the 10-millihertz to 5-hertz band. We also recorded pressure signals from ocean swells in the primary microseism band, implying the potential for tsunami sensing. Our method, because it does not require specialized equipment, laser sources, or dedicated fibers, is highly scalable for converting global submarine cables into continuous real-time earthquake and tsunami observatories.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1