A new type of seismic network is in development that takes advantage of community volunteers to install low-cost accelerometers in houses and buildings. The Community Seismic Network and Quake-Catcher Network are examples of this, in which observational-based structural monitoring is carried out using records from one to tens of stations in a single building. We have deployed about one hundred accelerometers in a number of buildings ranging between five and 23 stories in the Los Angeles region. In addition to a USB-connected device which connects to the host’s computer, we have developed a stand-alone sensor-plug-computer device that directly connects to the internet via Ethernet or wifi. In the case of the Community Seismic Network, ...
S eismic networks provide crucial data to scientists and the public about recent earthquakes, both l...
The Quake‐Catcher Network (QCN) is an expanding seismic array made possible by thousands of particip...
powerful sensor-equipped consumer devices enables a new class of Web application: community sense an...
A new type of seismic network is in development that takes advantage of community volunteers to inst...
The Community Seismic Network and Quake-Catcher Network involve participants from communities at lar...
Community-hosted seismic networks are a solution to the need for large numbers of sensors to operate...
The article describes the design of the Community Seismic Network, which is a dense open seismic net...
The Community Seismic Network (CSN) is currently a 500‐element strong‐motion network located in the ...
The Community Seismic Network (CSN) has partnered with the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) to i...
enabling structural health monitoring through instrumentation by community participant
The proliferation of smartphones and other powerful sensor-equipped consumer devices enables a new c...
The Community Seismic Network‐Los Angeles Unified School District is a network of 300 low‐cost micro...
We test the feasibility of rapidly detecting and characterizing earthquakes with the Quake‐Catcher N...
The proliferation of smartphones and other powerful sensor-equipped consumer devices enables a new c...
AbstractThe Quake-Catcher Network (QCN) project uses the low-cost sensors, i.e., accelerometers at- ...
S eismic networks provide crucial data to scientists and the public about recent earthquakes, both l...
The Quake‐Catcher Network (QCN) is an expanding seismic array made possible by thousands of particip...
powerful sensor-equipped consumer devices enables a new class of Web application: community sense an...
A new type of seismic network is in development that takes advantage of community volunteers to inst...
The Community Seismic Network and Quake-Catcher Network involve participants from communities at lar...
Community-hosted seismic networks are a solution to the need for large numbers of sensors to operate...
The article describes the design of the Community Seismic Network, which is a dense open seismic net...
The Community Seismic Network (CSN) is currently a 500‐element strong‐motion network located in the ...
The Community Seismic Network (CSN) has partnered with the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) to i...
enabling structural health monitoring through instrumentation by community participant
The proliferation of smartphones and other powerful sensor-equipped consumer devices enables a new c...
The Community Seismic Network‐Los Angeles Unified School District is a network of 300 low‐cost micro...
We test the feasibility of rapidly detecting and characterizing earthquakes with the Quake‐Catcher N...
The proliferation of smartphones and other powerful sensor-equipped consumer devices enables a new c...
AbstractThe Quake-Catcher Network (QCN) project uses the low-cost sensors, i.e., accelerometers at- ...
S eismic networks provide crucial data to scientists and the public about recent earthquakes, both l...
The Quake‐Catcher Network (QCN) is an expanding seismic array made possible by thousands of particip...
powerful sensor-equipped consumer devices enables a new class of Web application: community sense an...