TY - JOUR
T1 - Local seismic events in the area of Poland based on data from the PASSEQ 2006-2008 Experiment
AU - Polkowski, Marcin
AU - Plesiewicz, Beata
AU - Wiszniowski, Jan
AU - Wilde-Piórko, Monika
AU - Geissler, Wolfram H.
AU - Plomerová, Jaroslava
AU - Grad, Marek
AU - Babuška, Vladislav
AU - Brückl, Ewald
AU - Cyziene, Jolanta
AU - Czuba, Wojciech
AU - England, Richard
AU - Gaczyński, Edward
AU - Gazdova, Renata
AU - Gregersen, Soren
AU - Guterch, Aleksander
AU - Hanka, Winfried
AU - Hegedűs, Endre
AU - Heuer, Barbara
AU - Jedlička, Petr
AU - Lazauskiene, Jurga
AU - Keller, G. Randy
AU - Kind, Rainer
AU - Klinge, Klaus
AU - Kolinsky, Petr
AU - Komminaho, Kari
AU - Kozlovskaya, Elena
AU - Krüger, Frank
AU - Larsen, Tine
AU - Majdański, Mariusz
AU - Malek, Jiří
AU - Motuza, Gediminas
AU - Novotný, Oldřich
AU - Pietrasiak, Robert
AU - Plenefisch, Thomas
AU - Růžek, Bohuslav
AU - Sliaupa, Saulius
AU - Środa, Piotr
AU - Świeczak, Marzena
AU - Tiira, Timo
AU - Voss, Peter
AU - Wiejacz, Paweł
AU - PASSEQ Working Group
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Institute of Geophysics, Polish Academy of Sciences.
PY - 2016/12/1
Y1 - 2016/12/1
N2 - PASSEQ 2006-2008 (Passive Seismic Experiment in TESZ; Wilde-Piórko et al. 2008) was the biggest passive seismic experiment carried out so far in the area of Central Europe (Poland, Germany, the Czech Republic and Lithuania). 196 seismic stations (including 49 broadband seismometers) worked simultaneously for over two years. During the experiment, multiple types of data recorders and seismometers were used, making the analysis more complex and time consuming. The dataset was unified and repaired to start the detection of local seismic events. Two different approaches for detection were applied for stations located in Poland. The first one used standard STA/LTA triggers (Carl Johnson's STA/LTA algorithm) and grid search to classify and locate the events. The result was manually verified. The second approach used Real Time Recurrent Network (RTRN) detection (Wiszniowski et al. 2014). Both methods gave similar results, showing four previously unknown seismic events located in the Gulf of Gdańsk area, situated in the southern Baltic Sea. In this paper we discuss both detection methods with their pros and cons (accuracy, efficiency, manual work required, scalability). We also show details of all detected and previously unknown events in the discussed area.
AB - PASSEQ 2006-2008 (Passive Seismic Experiment in TESZ; Wilde-Piórko et al. 2008) was the biggest passive seismic experiment carried out so far in the area of Central Europe (Poland, Germany, the Czech Republic and Lithuania). 196 seismic stations (including 49 broadband seismometers) worked simultaneously for over two years. During the experiment, multiple types of data recorders and seismometers were used, making the analysis more complex and time consuming. The dataset was unified and repaired to start the detection of local seismic events. Two different approaches for detection were applied for stations located in Poland. The first one used standard STA/LTA triggers (Carl Johnson's STA/LTA algorithm) and grid search to classify and locate the events. The result was manually verified. The second approach used Real Time Recurrent Network (RTRN) detection (Wiszniowski et al. 2014). Both methods gave similar results, showing four previously unknown seismic events located in the Gulf of Gdańsk area, situated in the southern Baltic Sea. In this paper we discuss both detection methods with their pros and cons (accuracy, efficiency, manual work required, scalability). We also show details of all detected and previously unknown events in the discussed area.
KW - local seismicity
KW - Poland
KW - seismic detection methods
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85008936640&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1515/acgeo-2016-0091
DO - 10.1515/acgeo-2016-0091
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85008936640
SN - 1895-6572
VL - 64
SP - 2092
EP - 2113
JO - Acta Geophysica
JF - Acta Geophysica
IS - 6
ER -