Distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) provides an attractive solution for ocean-bottom seismological instrumentation by providing a dense and long-distance measurement of the deformation of the ground along offshore submarine fiber-optic cables. This study reports analyses made on records acquired with a network located along the Chilean margin....
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April 14, 2024 (v1)PublicationUploaded on: April 5, 2025
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2022 (v1)Journal article
International audience
Uploaded on: April 5, 2025 -
2022 (v1)Journal article
Since the 2000s, local seismic hazard studies have shown that Mayotte Island presented superficial geological formations prone to lithological site effects. The seismic sequence initiated in May 2018 confirmed the importance of such effects, both in terms of intensity and spatial extension. The analysis of the recorded strong motions showed...
Uploaded on: March 25, 2023 -
January 23, 2024 (v1)Journal article
Abstract Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) is becoming a powerful tool for earthquake monitoring, providing continuous strain‐rate records of seismic events along fiber optic cables. However, the use of standard seismological techniques for earthquake source characterization requires the conversion of data in ground motion quantities. In this...
Uploaded on: February 18, 2024 -
April 23, 2023 (v1)Publication
Fiber-optic Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) is of critical value for the expansion of seismological networks, particularly in regions that are hard to instrument. The work presented here is part of the 5-year ERC ABYSS project, which aims at building a permanent seafloor observatory to increase our ability to capture low magnitude seismic...
Uploaded on: April 4, 2025 -
April 14, 2024 (v1)Publication
Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) is of critical value for the offshore expansion of seismological networks. The work presented here is part of the 5-years ERC ABYSS project, which aims at building a permanent seafloor seismic observatory leveraging offshore telecommunication cables along the central coast of Chile. In preparation for this...
Uploaded on: April 4, 2025 -
2024 (v1)Journal article
On continental margins, sediments cause significant and spatially variable delays in seismic phase arrival times. The strong impedance contrast of the sediment‐bedrock interface causes P‐wave splitting that is clearly seen on distributed acoustic sensing recordings of earthquakes, resulting in additional phase arrivals that must be picked...
Uploaded on: October 5, 2024