Author Topic: How earthquake scientists eavesdrop on North Korea’s nuclear blasts  (Read 523 times)

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rangerrebew

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How earthquake scientists eavesdrop on North Korea’s nuclear blasts
Waves and ripples in the Earth can reveal the location and depth of an explosion
By
Alexandra Witze
12:00pm, July 25, 2017


On September 9 of last year, in the middle of the morning, seismometers began lighting up around East Asia. From South Korea to Russia to Japan, geophysical instruments recorded squiggles as seismic waves passed through and shook the ground. It looked as if an earthquake with a magnitude of 5.2 had just happened. But the ground shaking had originated at North Korea’s nuclear weapons test site.

It was the fifth confirmed nuclear test in North Korea, and it opened the latest chapter in a long-running geologic detective story. Like a police examiner scrutinizing skid marks to figure out who was at fault in a car crash, researchers analyze seismic waves to determine if they come from a natural earthquake or an artificial explosion. If the latter, then scientists can also tease out details such as whether the blast was nuclear and how big it was. Test after test, seismologists are improving their understanding of North Korea’s nuclear weapons program.

https://www.sciencenews.org/article/earthquakes-north-korea-nuclear-testing?tgt=nr
« Last Edit: July 29, 2017, 12:12:27 pm by rangerrebew »

Mad Max

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Re: How earthquake scientists eavesdrop on North Korea’s nuclear blasts
« Reply #1 on: August 04, 2017, 07:34:00 am »
The United States has a "sniffer" airplane over North Korea. This is to detect radiation in the atmosphere. There is also another method where there are satellites to detect a "flash" in the atmosphere as what happened with Vela 6911 incident(The South Atlantic Flash) in 1979. There is a United States Military Monitoring Station in Alexandria,VA the looks for this type of activity.
« Last Edit: August 04, 2017, 07:34:57 am by Mad Max »

Mad Max

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Re: How earthquake scientists eavesdrop on North Korea’s nuclear blasts
« Reply #2 on: August 04, 2017, 07:45:46 am »
The United States has a "sniffer" airplane over North Korea. This is to detect radiation in the atmosphere. There is also another method where there are satellites to detect a "flash" in the atmosphere as what happened with Vela 6911 incident(The South Atlantic Flash) in 1979. There is a United States Military Monitoring Station in Alexandria,VA the looks for this type of activity.

The United States can track all missile launches all over the world through the Defense Support Program Network satellites. It can detect where the missile took off and where it is going to land. All that information is fed into NORAD which is located deep within a mountain in the Rockies. The second base to share this information is Peterson AFB
« Last Edit: August 04, 2017, 08:01:55 am by Mad Max »