Ondas Sismicas ¿Como Leer El Sismografo?
Ondas Sismicas ¿Como Leer El Sismografo?
Ondas Sismicas ¿Como Leer El Sismografo?
What is a seismogram,
and what can it record? HOT Links to Related Resources:
A seismogram is the record of ground movement
detected by a seismometer and portrayed on a Animations: Vertical seismograph
time-versus-amplitude graph (Figure 1). Seismograms show 3-Component Seismogram
how the ground moves with the passage of time.
Seismometers can detect local ground movement caused Video: Seismic Waves: P, S, and Surface
by large distant events, as well as by the movement caused
by large and small events close to the seismometer (Figure Interactives: Locating An Earthquake
2). Microseisms can be caused by environmental noise Using Triangulation
(wind, lightening, rain), motor vehicles, and people at or
near the station. By noting which sites have recorded the
signals and comparing the signal character, seismologists
can determine the probable source and location of the
signal*.
In the past, seismograms were recorded on seismic drums
using ink and paper (See Hot Link to “Seismographs”), but
seismograms are now recorded electronically by computers.
This has streamlined our ability to analyze the data to locate
and determine the magnitude of earthquakes world wide
(Figure 4).
Figure 7B— Helicorder grab from USGS “Real-time Seismograph Displays. Each horizontal line represents 15 minutes of data;
four lines per hour. The colors of the horizontal lines have no particular significance except they have a 4-color/hour cycle;
they are used to make it easier to distinguish lines from one another and to make it easier to recognize at which quarter-hour
of data we are looking. The vertical lines are not part of the seismogram. They were added to indicate equal intervals of time.
Time is indicated on the left in local Pacific time, and on the right end in Universal (or Greenwich) time.
(Text from USGS: http://earthquake.usgs.gov/monitoring/helicorders/about.php)
Vocabulary wave
length
Amplitude—the maximum disturbance or distance from the constant point. On a seismogram the horizontal time 2
crest
line is flat until there is a ground disturbance which is recorded as wave, or seismogram. The amplitude of 1
a seismic wave is the amount the ground moves up or down. Amplitude is one-half the distance between
0
Body Waves—waves that move within the Earth’s interior or within a body of rock. P and S waves are body waves.
Earthquake—shaking or trembling of the earth that accompanies rock movements extending anywhere from the crust to 680
km below the Earth’s surface. It is the release of stored elastic energy caused by sudden fracture and movement of rocks
inside the Earth. Part of the energy released produces seismic waves, like P, S, and surface waves, that travel outward in
all directions from the point of initial rupture. These waves shake the ground as they pass by. An earthquake is felt if the
shaking is strong enough to cause ground accelerations exceeding approximately 1.0 centimeter/second squared. Types of
earthquakes include:
A) Tectonic Earthquake: earthquake that occurs when the earth’s crust breaks due to geological forces on rocks and
adjoining plates that cause physical and chemical changes. B) Volcanic Earthquakes: earthquakes that result from
tectonic forces which occur in conjunction with volcanic activity. C) Collapse Earthquakes: small earthquakes in
underground caverns and mines. D) Explosion Earthquakes: earthquakes which are the result of the detonation of nuclear
and chemical devices
Epicenter—the point on the Earth’s surface directly above the focus of an earthquake.
Magnitude—The magnitude is a number that characterizes the relative size of an earthquake. Magnitude is based on measurement of
the maximum motion recorded by a seismograph. Several scales have been defined, but the most commonly used are (1) local
magnitude (ML), commonly referred to as “Richter magnitude,” (2) surface-wave magnitude (Ms), (3) body-wave magnitude
(Mb), and (4) moment magnitude (Mw). Scales 1-3 have limited range and applicability and do not satisfactorily measure the
size of the largest earthquakes. The moment magnitude (Mw) scale, based on the concept of seismic moment, is uniformly
applicable to all sizes of earthquakes but is more difficult to compute than the other types. All magnitude scales should yield
approximately the same value for any given earthquake..
Moment Magnitude—the preferred measure of earthquake size (magnitude) in which the stiffness of the rock, the average slip on
the rupture plane, and the area of the rupture plane are taken into account (the “moment” of the earthquake). See magnitude.
Seismic Wave— an elastic wave generated by an impulse such as an earthquake or an explosion. Seismic waves may travel either
through the earth’s interior (P and S waves; the fastest waves) or along or near the earth’s surface (Rayleigh and Love waves).
Seismic waves travel at speeds of several kilometers per second.
Seismicity—the geographic and historical distribution (the “where?” and “how often?”) of earthquakes.
Seismogram—A real-time record of earthquake ground motion recorded by a seismograph. Seismograms
are the records (paper copy or computer image) used to calculate the location and magnitude of an earthquake..
Seismograph—an instrument that records vibrations of the Earth, especially earthquakes. Seismograph generally refers to the
seismometer and a recording device as a single unit. See IRIS’ Seismographs.
Seismology—science that deals with earthquakes and attendant phenomenon including the study of artificially produced elastic waves
in the Earth’s material.
Seismometer—a sensitive instrument that can detect waves emitted by even the smallest earthquakes. (See seismograph.)
Surface Wave—waves that move close to or on the outside surface of the Earth rather than through the deep interior like the
faster P or S waves. Two principal types of surface waves, Love and Rayleigh waves, are generated during an earthquakes.
Rayleigh waves cause both vertical and horizontal ground motion, and Love waves cause horizontal motion only. They both
produce ground shaking at the Earth’s surface but very little motion deep in the Earth. Because the amplitude of surface waves
diminishes less rapidly with distance than the amplitude of P or S waves, surface waves are often the most important component
of ground shaking far from the earthquake source.
S Waves—secondary body waves that oscillate the ground perpendicular to the direction of wave travel. They travel about 1.7 times
slower than P waves. Because liquids will not sustain shear stresses, S waves will not travel through liquids like water, molten
rock, or the Earth’s outer core. S waves produce vertical and horizontal motion in the ground surface.