Observational seismology is fundamentally limited by our ability to record seismic signals across a very large bandwidth. The sensitivity of modern seismic instrumentation to non-seismic noise sources as well as other undesirable signals can limit our ability to record seismic events with high fidelity. The purpose of this session is to communicate recent advances in seismic instrumentation and deployment methods, as well as observations that highlight the heavy demands on instrumentation of very broadband seismology. Abstracts that highlight recent advances, techniques or methods for seismic instrumentation, seismic network advances or advances in earthquake early warning instrumentation are encouraged. We also encourage abstracts that focus on long-period or high-frequency seismology that could show limitations in our ability to record such signals.
Conveners
David Wilson, U.S. Geological Survey (dwilson@usgs.gov); Adam Ringler, U.S. Geological Survey (aringler@usgs.gov); Robert Anthony, U.S. Geological Survey (reanthony@usgs.gov)
Oral Presentations
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Submission
Performance of Earthscope Transportable Array in Alaska