December 2014 - Marine Technology Reporter

Realtime Tsunami Monitoring in Japan

Posted by Irina Tabakina

In 2014, tsunami waves originating off the coast of Chile were detected near Japan, where EvoLogics modems enabled acoustic communication between JAMSTEC’s Vector Tsunameter on the seafloor and the autonomous Wave Glider vehicle on the ocean surface, transmitting real-time data to the shore over satellite.
Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science Technology (JAMSTEC) has developed and tested the new ocean bottom Tsunameter (The Vector TsunaMeter - VTM), which estimates the tsunami propagation vector based on the ocean dynamo effects.
As a step towards building a VTM network for real-time observation, a trial monitoring station was deployed about 200 km East of the Oshika peninsula, Japan (38°14.0 N, 143°35.13 E) in 2013 - 2014. The Vector Tsunameter was deployed on the seafloor 3420 m deep. Data, collected by the VTM, were transmitted acoustically to surface-cruising Wave Glider and then over satellite transferred to the shore.
The application required fast and reliable data transfers between the VTM and the Wave Glider to transmit critical information in real time. The long-term deployment of the instruments demanded low power-consuming solutions.
Moreover, reducing drag was important for the Wave Glider vehicle on the ocean surface.
EvoLogics S2C R12/24 underwater acoustic modems were integrated on both the VTM and the Wave Glider. During the long-term deployment of the system in 2013-2014, the modems provided bidirectional communication between the VTM and the Wave Glider/shore control station. In normal operation mode 1457 bytes were transmitted to the Wave Glider every hour, containing 60 sets of minute-long measurement data samples from the VTM. In Tsunami-mode, the downside modem was transmitting 161 bytes every 1 minute with six sets of 10-second-long measurement data samples.
As the system was deployed from 2014/3/13 till 2014/5/10, it operated in Tsunami-mode for four hours.
On the early morning of April 3, the system caught the tsunami waves propagating towards the Japanese coasts after an 8.0 magnitude earthquake hit 83 km North-West of Iquique, Chile on April 2, 2014 (JST).
www.evologics.de

(As published in the November/December 2014 edition of Marine Technology Reporter - http://www.marinetechnologynews.com/Magazine)

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