학술논문

Evaluating the reliability of phones as seismic monitoring instruments
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Earthquake Spectra. 30(2):721-742
Subject
19|Seismology
acceleration
accelerometers
cell phones
damage
earthquakes
ground motion
Imperial Valley earthquake 1979
information technology
instruments
monitoring
one-dimensional models
peak ground acceleration
peak ground velocity
reliability
sampling
seismic intensity
shaking tables
strong motion
Tabas earthquake 1978
testing
three-dimensional models
velocity
Language
English
ISSN
8755-2930
Abstract
Emergency responders must "see" the effects of an earthquake clearly and rapidly for effective response. This paper presents a novel use of cell phone and information technology to measure ground motion intensity parameters. The phone sensor is an imperfect device and has a limited operational range. Thus, shake table tests were performed to evaluate their reliability as seismic monitoring instruments. Representative handheld devices, either rigidly connected to the table or free to move, measured shaking intensity parameters well. Bias in 5%-damped spectral accelerations measured by phones was less than 0.05 and 0.2 [log(g)] during one-dimensional (1-D) and three-dimensional (3-D) shaking in frequencies ranging from 1 Hz to 10 Hz. They did tend to overestimate the Arias Intensity, but this error declined for stronger motions with larger signal-to-noise ratios. With these ubiquitous measurement devices, a more accurate and rapid portrayal of the damage distribution during an earthquake can be provided.