NASA Satellite Positioning Software May Aid in Tsunami Warnings

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June 28, 2006

Erica Hupp/Dwayne Brown 
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1237/1726

Alan Buis 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
818-354-0474 

RELEASE: 06-251

NASA SATELLITE POSITIONING SOFTWARE MAY AID IN TSUNAMI WARNINGS

University scientists using Global Positioning System software, 
developed by NASA, have shown GPS can determine, within minutes, 
whether an earthquake is big enough to generate an ocean-wide 
tsunami. This NASA-funded technology can be used to provide faster 
tsunami warnings. 

A team led by Geoffrey Blewitt of the Nevada Bureau of Mines and 
Geology and Seismological Laboratory, University of Nevada, Reno, 
demonstrated that a large quake's true size can be determined within 
15 minutes using GPS data. This is much faster than current methods. 

"Tsunami warning is a race against time," said co-author Seth Stein, 
Department of Geological Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, 
Ill. "Tsunamis travel at jet speed, so warning centers must 
accurately decide, within minutes, whether to issue alerts. This has 
to be done fast enough for the warning to be distributed to 
authorities in impacted areas so they can implement response plans. 
Together with seismometer and ocean buoy data, GPS adds another tool 
that can improve future tsunami danger assessments." 

"We'll always need seismology as the first level of alert for large 
earthquakes, and we'll need ocean buoys to actually sense the tsunami 
waves," Blewitt said. "The advantage of including GPS in warning 
systems is that it quickly tells how much the ocean floor moved, and 
that information can directly set tsunami models into motion." 

The new method, called GPS displacement, works by measuring the time 
radio signals from GPS satellites arrive at ground stations located 
within a few thousand kilometers of a quake. From these data, 
scientists can calculate how far the stations moved because of the 
quake. They can derive an earthquake model and the quake's true size, 
called its 'moment magnitude.' This magnitude is directly related to 
a quake's potential for generating tsunamis. 

As illustrated by the magnitude 9.2-9.3 Sumatra quake of December 
2004, scientific methods have difficulty quickly determining moment 
magnitude for very large quakes. That quake was first estimated at 
8.0 using seismological techniques designed for rapid analysis. 
Because these techniques derive estimates from the first recorded 
seismic waves, they tend to underestimate quakes larger than about 
8.5. That is the approximate size needed to generate major ocean-wide 
tsunamis. The initial estimate was the primary reason warning centers 
in the Pacific significantly underestimated the earthquake's tsunami 
potential. 

The potential of GPS to contribute to tsunami warning became apparent 
after the Sumatra earthquake. GPS measurements showed that quake 
moved the ground permanently more than 0.4 inches as far away as 
India; about 1,200 miles away from the epicenter. "With signals like 
that, an earthquake this huge can't hide," Blewitt said. "We 
hypothesized that if GPS data could be analyzed rapidly and 
accurately, they would quickly indicate the earthquake's true size 
and tsunami potential." 

To test the feasibility of their approach, the scientists used NASA's 
satellite positioning data processing software to analyze data from 
38 GPS stations located at varying distances from the Sumatra quake's 
epicenter. The software pinpoints a station's precise location to 
within 0.3 inches. Only data that were available within 15 minutes of 
the earthquake were used. Results indicated most of the permanent 
ground displacements occurred within a few minutes of the arrival of 
the first seismic waves. Their analysis inferred an earthquake model 
and a moment magnitude of 9.0, very near the earthquake's final 
calculated size. 

"Modeling earthquakes with GPS requires a robust, real-time ability to 
predict where GPS satellites are in space with exacting precision, 
which our software does," said Frank Webb, a NASA geologist at the 
agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. "This technique 
improves rapid estimates of the true size of great earthquakes and 
advances real-time tsunami modeling capabilities." 

Results of the study are published in Geophysical Research Letters. 

Media contacts: Jill Boudreaux, University of Nevada, Reno, 
775-784-4611; Megan Fellman, Northwestern University, 847-491-3115; 
and Harvey Leifert, American Geophysical Union, Washington, 
202-777-7507. 

For information about NASA and agency programs, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/home 

	
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