Seismological Research Letters; May 2008; v. 79; no. 3;
p. 438-443; DOI: 10.1785/gssrl.79.3.438
© 2008 Seismological Society of America
WiLSoN: The Wirelessly Linked Seismological Network and Its Application in the Middle American Subduction Experiment
Allen Husker,
Igor Stubailo,
Martin Lukac,
Vinayak Naik,
Richard Guy,
Paul Davis, and
Deborah Estrin
University of California, Los
Angeles
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INTRODUCTION
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The state of the art in temporary seismology installations for years has
been stand-alone sites. In such an installation, sites are typically visited
once a month to collect data and check station health. The benefit is that
stand-alone stations are very quick to permit and install, and sites are not
limited by local infrastructure (i.e., telephone or Internet) to
collect data. Moreover, the technology for such installations is well-tested
and mature. The downside is that the state of health of the system is unknown
between data collection intervals, and when an interesting earthquake occurs
researchers must wait for the data. In places where the local networks are
sparse, the time to acquire data from temporary networks can be of great
importance to the local population.
The technology to transport and share large amounts of data rapidly has
increased dramatically over the past 10 years with the development of the
Internet. Tools and protocols have been developed to link millions of users to
millions of Web sites and data repositories. The Center for Embedded Networked
Sensing (CENS) developed the Wirelessly Linked Seismological Network (WiLSoN)
to extend the Internet into a seismological network. The seismology community
already has deployed radios in both temporary (e.g.,
Werner-Allen et al.
2006) and permanent seismic networks (e.g., the High
Performance Wireless Research and Education Network, the Southern California
Seismic Network, USArray, the U.S. National Seismic Network, the Mexican
Servicio Sismológico Nacional, and the Global Seismic Network) in the
past. The goal of extending the Internet into a seismological network is to be
able to dramatically increase scalability, to improve monitoring of the state
of the network, and to improve ease of deployment. A freshly deployed seismic
station within WiLSoN is able to join the network much like a laptop . . . [Full Text of this Article]
University of California at Los Angeles
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3806 Geology Building
Los Angeles, California 90095
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uskerhay@moho.ess.ucla.edu
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H.)
Copyright © 2008 by Seismological Society of America