The New Seismographic Vault and the Detection Capability of Syowa Station, Antarctica (Reports of the Japanese Antarctic Research Expedition)

A new vault for seismographs was built at Japanese Antarctic Station Syowa (SYO) and the observation of the HES and the Long-Period seismographs started on March 1, 1970. The old seismograph room was not adequate for detecting the extreme micro-seismic activities when the wind velocity exceeded 10m/...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Katsutada KAMINUMA, Heihachiro CHIBA
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Japanese
Published: National Institute of Polar Research 1973
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.15094/00007702
https://doaj.org/article/a2959941840248639ed6791956a9d411
Description
Summary:A new vault for seismographs was built at Japanese Antarctic Station Syowa (SYO) and the observation of the HES and the Long-Period seismographs started on March 1, 1970. The old seismograph room was not adequate for detecting the extreme micro-seismic activities when the wind velocity exceeded 10m/s. In the new vault, however, the earthquakes can be identified even when the wind velocity is over 20m/s in summer and 30m/s in winter. The earthquake detection capability in the new vault is reported here. We examined how many earthquakes reported in the summary report of NOAA were detected as P phase groups (P and PKP) on the HES seismograms at SYO during the period from March to December, 1970. The detection capability of SYO is 23%, which is a few times larger than that of the old one. The detection capability is discussed in connection with the magnitude and the epicentral distance, and is compared with those at other stations.