detecting earthquakes, Caltech researchers say

Imagine repurposing underground fiber optic cables, typically used for delivering high-speed Internet to California residents, to detect and measure earthquakes.

That is the focus of a recent research by scientists at the California Institute of Technology led by Zhongwen Zhan, who presented his findings to students and community members during a lecture on Wednesday evening, April 24.

“California is the earthquake country, and we have a pretty good seismic network starting from more than 100 years ago now,” said Zhan, a professor of geophysics at Caltech. “We really want to have even denser instruments so we can capture all the small seismicity from one neighborhood to another.”

Zhan’s team employed distributed acoustic sensing to study a section of the fiber-optic cable. By using laser emitters to project beams of light through the cables, which contain tiny defects every few meters that reflect a portion of the light back to the source, scientists gathered insights into the motion of seismic waves.

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