www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/4/685/2004/ doi:10.5194/nhess-4-685-2004 © Author(s) 2004. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. VLF-LF radio signals collected at Bari (South Italy): a preliminary analysis on signal anomalies associated with earthquakes 1Department of Physics, University of Bari, Via Amendola, 173, 70126 Bari, Italy 2INFM-Unity of Bari, Via Amendola, 173, 70126 Bari, Italy 3Department of Engineering of Enterprise, University of Roma Tor Vergata, Via di Tor Vergata, 00133 Rome, Italy 4Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Foggia, Via L. Pinto, 71100 Foggia, Italy 5United Institute of the Earth’s Physics, Russian Academy of Science, Bolshaya Gruzinskaya 10, 123995 Moscow, Russia 6Dept. of Electronic Engineering, Univ. of Electro-Communications, 1-5-1 Chofugaoka, Chofu City, Tokyo 182-8585, Japan 7Department of Electronics Engineering, Chubu University, 1200 Matsumoto-cho, Kasugai Aichi, 487-8501, Japan Abstract. At the beginning of 2002 an OmniPAL receiver was put into operation at the Department of Physics of Bari University (Southern Italy). The electric field strength of five VLF-LF signals transmitted from United Kingdom (f=16kHz), France (f=20.9kHz), Germany (f=23.4kHz), Iceland (f=37.5kHz) and Italy (f=54kHz) has been monitoring with a 5s sampling frequency. In a first step we reduced the amount of the data taking one datum each 10min (mean of the ±5min raw data) and then we smoothed these data by a running adjacent averaging over 7 days. Analysing the trends we obtained, we revealed at first in the signal from the Italian transmitter two clear intensity decreases in April 2002 and in August-September 2002. At these times we observed earthquakes with M=4.3 and M=5.6 respectively near the transmitter-receiver path and a precursory effect in the previous decreases appeared. Then, we noted that all of the five radio trends in the time interval March 2002-February 2003 are more disturbed than in other periods; in particular an evident simultaneous decrease appears in January-February 2003. We propose that these disturbances are related to general excitation of the margin between the African and European plates. In a second step we examined the terminator time (evening) changes for the Italian transmitter in July-September 2002, and we found significant deviations from the mean value at the end of August, which is supportive for some precursory ionospheric signature of earthquakes. Full Article (PDF, 936 KB) Special Issue Citation: Biagi, P. F., Piccolo, R., Castellana, L., Maggipinto, T., Ermini, A., Martellucci, S., Bellecci, C., Perna, G., Capozzi, V., Molchanov, O. A., Hayakawa, M., and Ohta, K.: VLF-LF radio signals collected at Bari (South Italy): a preliminary analysis on signal anomalies associated with earthquakes, Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci., 4, 685-689, doi:10.5194/nhess-4-685-2004, 2004. Bibtex EndNote Reference Manager XML |
|