• DocumentCode
    601370
  • Title

    Some characteristics of bottom pressure sensors of DONET

  • Author

    Matsumoto, Hirokazu ; Araki, Eiichiro ; Kawaguchi, Kentaro ; Nishida, Shuichi ; Kaneda, Yuya

  • Author_Institution
    Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Sci. & Technol., Yokosuka, Japan
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    5-8 March 2013
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    7
  • Abstract
    DONET, i.e., the dense ocean-floor network system for earthquakes and tsunamis has started its operation in the Nankai Trough, SW Japan in the early of 2010, and followed by the extension to the westward region as DONET2 in near future. DONET observatory is composed of various sensors such as broadband seismometer, seismic accelerometer, tsunami meter, etc. The present study focuses on bottom pressure sensors being used as tsunami meters measuring hydraulic pressure change. Pressure sensors specify their performance of 0.005 % full scale regarding both hysteresis and repeatability. In the present study, pressure sensors´ characteristics have been evaluated by using the JAMSTEC´s high accuracy pressure standard before deploying into the deep-sea. The high accuracy pressure standard is mainly customized by a piston gauge, a pressure generator/controller, a reference pressure monitor, and a thermal controlled chamber, which virtually reproduces the deep-sea environment. Firstly, we have confirmed hysteresis and repeatability by applying barometric pressure to the full scale pressure range, i.e., ca. 0 MPa to 68 MPa to the sensors. It has been reproduced that all of pressure sensors perform their specified hysteresis and repeatability. Then, long-term sensors´ stabilities have been evaluated by applying static 20 MPa hydraulic pressure, which is equivalent to 2,000 meters water depth under the constant temperature of 2 °C for the duration of approximately one month. As a result, sensors´ drift varies among pressure sensors, however, which implies that the gradual drift possibly occurs a few centimeters per month in maximum. We also discuss the sensors´ drift after deploying the deep-sea by analyzing the long-term in-situ observations, which shows that it continues at a rate of a few to ten centimeters per year in the early stage, then it tends to be reduced gradually. This paper also reports that the tsunami from the Tohoku earthquake on 11 March 2011 coul- be observed by DONET with those peak amplitudes of ~20 cm.
  • Keywords
    earthquakes; oceanographic equipment; seafloor phenomena; tsunami; AD 2010; AD 2011 03 11; DONET bottom pressure sensors; DONET observatory; JAMSTEC high accuracy pressure standard; Japan; Nankai Trough; Tohoku earthquake; broadband seismometer; deep-sea environment; dense ocean-floor network system; earthquakes; hydraulic pressure; pressure 20 MPa; reference pressure monitor; seismic accelerometer; thermal controlled chamber; tsunami meter; Earthquakes; Observatories; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors; Tides;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Underwater Technology Symposium (UT), 2013 IEEE International
  • Conference_Location
    Tokyo
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4673-5948-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/UT.2013.6519863
  • Filename
    6519863