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Research data keyboard_double_arrow_right Dataset 2020 EnglishZenodo EC | VOLTAIC (705619), EC | EPOS IP (676564)von der Linden, Jens; Kimblin, Clare; McKenna, Ian; Bagley, Skyler; Li, Hsiao-Chi; Houim, Ryan; Kueny, Christopher S.; Kuhl, Allen; Grote, Dave; Converse, Mark; Vossen, Caron E. J.; Stern, Sönke; Cimarelli, Corrado; Sears, Jason;Background This data is camera images and nozzle pressure gauge voltage traces from rapid decompression shots at the LMU shock tube facility. This data is discussed in the "Materials and Methods" section of the paper "Standing Shock Prevents Propagation of Sparks in Supersonic Explosive Flows". Electric sparks and explosive flows have long been associated with each other. Flowing dust particles originate charge through contact and separate based on inertia, resulting in strong electric fields supporting sparks. These sparks can cause explosions in dusty environments, especially those rich in carbon, such as coal mines and grain elevators. Recent observations of explosive events in nature and decompression experiments indicate that supersonic flows of explosions may alter the electrical discharge process. Shocks may suppress parts of the hierarchy of the discharge phenomena, such as leaders. In our decompression experiments, a shock tube ejects a flow of gas and particles into an expansion chamber. We imaged an illuminated plume from the decompression of a mixture of argon and <100 mg of diamond particles and observe sparks occurring below the sharp boundary of a condensation cloud. We also performed hydrodynamics simulations of the decompression event that provide insight into the conditions supporting the observed behavior. Simulation results agree closely with the experimentally observed Mach disk shock shape and height. This represents direct evidence that the sparks are sculpted by the outflow. The spatial and temporal scale of the sparks transmit an impression of the shock tube flow, a connection that could enable novel instrumentation to diagnose currently inaccessible supersonic granular phenomena. Accessing Data The prefixes of the filenames correspond to the shot dates and times listed in table S1 of the paper. The "_camera.zip" files contains tiff images of the camera frames. The ".ixc" file in each zip lists camera settings in plain text. The ".dat" file contains the voltage measurement of the nozzle pressure gauge. Row 1 is the header, row 2 is the time in seconds, and row 3 is the voltage of the pressure gauge in Volts. The peak pressure in the header can be used to relate the voltage to pressure. This work was performed in part under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under contract DE-AC52-07NA27344, and Mission Support and Test Services, LLC, under Contract No. DE-NA0003624 with support from the Site-Directed Research and Development program, DOE/NV/03624--0956, and in part by the European Plate Observing Systems Transnational Access program of the European Community HORIZON 2020 research and innovation program under grant N 676564. CC acknowledges the support from the DFG grant CI 25/2-1 and from the European Community HORIZON 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska Curie grant nr. 705619. LLNL-MI-817289. This document was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States government. Neither the United States government nor Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, nor any of their employees makes any warranty, expressed or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, complete- ness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference herein to any specific com- mercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the United States government or Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States government or Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, and shall not be used for advertising or product endorsement purposes. {"references": ["C. Cimarelli, M. Alatorre-Ibargengoitia, U. Kueppers, B. Scheu, D. Dingwell, Experimen- tal generation of volcanic lightning. Geology 42, 79\u201382 (2014)"]}
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visibility 32visibility views 32 download downloads 26 Powered bydescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article , Other literature type 2022 Germany, Portugal, Switzerland, Norway English EC | EPOS SP (871121)Florian Haslinger; Roberto Basili; Rémy Bossu; Carlo Cauzzi; Fabrice Cotton; Helen Crowley; Susana Custodio; Laurentiu Danciu; Mario Locati; Alberto Michelini; Irene Molinari; Lars Ottemöller; Stefano Parolai;handle: 10451/53665 , 20.500.11850/549765 , 11250/3058781
In this article we describe EPOS Seismology, the Thematic Core Service consortium for the seismology domain within the European Plate Observing System infrastructure. EPOS Seismology was developed alongside the build-up of EPOS during the last decade, in close collaboration between the existing pan-European seismological initiatives ORFEUS (Observatories and Research Facilities for European Seismology), EMSC (Euro-Mediterranean Seismological Center) and EFEHR (European Facilities for Earthquake Hazard and Risk) and their respective communities. It provides on one hand a governance framework that allows a well-coordinated interaction of the seismological community services with EPOS and its bodies, and on the other hand it strengthens the coordination among the already existing seismological initiatives with regard to data, products and service provisioning and further development. Within the EPOS Delivery Framework, ORFEUS, EMSC and EFEHR provide a wide range of services that allow open access to a vast amount of seismological data and products, following and implementing the FAIR principles and supporting open science. Services include access to raw seismic waveforms of thousands of stations together with relevant station and data quality information, parametric earthquake information of recent and historical earthquakes together with advanced event-specific products like moment tensors or source models and further ancillary services, and comprehensive seismic hazard and risk information, covering latest European scale models and their underlying data. The services continue to be available on the well-established domain-specific platforms and websites, and are also consecutively integrated with the interoperable central EPOS data infrastructure. EPOS Seismology and its participating organizations provide a consistent framework for the future development of these services and their operation as EPOS services, closely coordinated also with other international seismological initiatives, and is well set to represent the European seismological research infrastructures and their stakeholders within EPOS. Annals of Geophysics, 65 (2) ISSN:1593-5213
Annals of Geophysics arrow_drop_down Universidade de Lisboa: Repositório.ULOther literature type . 2022Data sources: Universidade de Lisboa: Repositório.ULGFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2022Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciencesadd ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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visibility 23visibility views 23 download downloads 26 Powered bydescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article 2019 United Kingdom, Germany, Netherlands English EC | EPOS IP (676564), EC | SHEER (640896)Cielesta, Szymon; Orlecka-Sikora, Beata; Staszek, Monika; Urban, Paweł; Olszewska, Dorota; Ruigrok, Elmer; Toon, Sam; Picozzi, Matteo; Kwiatek, Grzegorz; Cesca, Simone; López Comino, José Angel; Isherwood, Catherine; Montcoudiol, Nelly; Jarosławski, Janusz; non-UU output of UU-AW members;handle: 1874/380353
The SHEER database brings together a large amount of data of various types: interdisciplinary site data from seven independent episodes, research data and those for the project results dissemination process. This concerns mainly shale gas exploitation test sites, processing procedures, results of data interpretation and recommendations. The smart SHEER database harmonizes data from different fields (geophysical, geochemical, geological, technological, etc.), creates and provides access to an advanced database of case studies of environmental impact indicators associated with shale gas exploitation and exploration, which previously did not exist. A unique component of the SHEER database comes from the monitoring activity performed during the project in one active shale gas exploration and exploitation site at Wysin, Poland, which started from the pre-operational phase. The SHEER database is capable of the adoption of new data such as results of other Work Packages and has developed an over-arching structure for higher-level integration.
GFZ German Research ... arrow_drop_down GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2019Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesActa GeophysicaArticle . 2019 . 2018GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2019Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciencesadd ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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visibility 0visibility views 0 download downloads 5 Powered bydescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Research 2020 Germany EnglishGFZ Data Services EC | EPOS IP (676564)Shevchenko, A.; Dvigalo, V.; Walter, T.; Mania, R.;Shevchenko, A.; Dvigalo, V.; Walter, T.; Mania, R.;Decades of photogrammetric records at Bezymianny, one of the most active volcanoes on Earth, allow unveiling morphological changes, eruption and intrusion dynamics, erosion, lava and tephra deposition processes. This data publication releases an almost 7-decade long record, retrieved from airborne, satellite, and UAV platforms. The Kamchatkan Institute of Volcanology and Seismology released archives of high-resolution aerial images acquired in 1967-2013. We complemented the aerial datasets with 2017 Pleiades tri-stereo satellite and UAV images. The images were processed using Erdas Imagine and Photomod software. Here we publish nine quality-controlled point clouds in LAS format referenced to the WGS84 (UTM zone 57N). By comparing the point clouds we were able to describe topographic changes and calculate volumetric differences, details of which were further analyzed in Shevchenko et al. (2020, https://doi.org/...). The ~5-decade-long photogrammetric record was achieved by 8 aerial and 1 satellite-UAV datasets. The 8 sets of near nadir aerial photographs acquired in 1967, 1968, 1976, 1977, 1982, 1994, 2006, and 2013 were taken with various photogrammetry cameras dedicated for topographic analysis, specifically the AFA 41-10 camera (1967, 1968, 1976, and 1977; focal length = 99.086 mm), the TAFA 10 camera (1982 and 1994; focal length = 99.120 mm), and the AFA TE-140 camera (2006 and 2013; focal length = 139.536 mm). These analog cameras have all an 18×18 cm frame size. The acquisition flight altitude above the mean surface of Bezymianny varied from 1,500-2,500 m above mean surface elevation, translating up to >5,000 m above sea level. For photogrammetric processing, we used 3-4 consecutive shots that provided a 60-70% forward overlap. The analog photo negatives were digitized by scanning with Epson Perfection V750 Pro scanner in a resolution of 2,400 pixels/inch (approx. pixel (px) size = 0.01 mm). The mean scale within a single photograph depends on the distance to the surface and corresponds on average to 1:10,000-1:20,000. Thus, each px in the scanned image represents about 10-20 cm resolution on the ground. The coordinates of 12 ground control points were derived from a Theo 010B theodolite dataset collected at geodetic benchmarks during a 1977 fieldwork. These benchmarks were established on the slopes of Bezymianny before the 1977 aerial survey and then captured with the AFA 41-10 aerial camera. The most recent was a satellite dataset acquired on 2017-09-09 by the PHR 1B sensor aboard the Pleiades satellite (AIRBUS Defence & Space) operated by the French space agency (CNES). The forward, nadir and backward camera configuration allows revisiting any point on earth and was tasked for the acquisition of Bezymianny to provide a 0.5 m resolution panchromatic imagery dataset. In order to improve the Pleiades data, we complemented them with UAV data collected on 2017-07-29 with DJI Mavic Pro during fieldwork at Bezymianny. This data publication includes a description of the data (in pdf format) and the nine processed and controlled three-dimensional point clouds (in LAS format). The point clouds can be easily interpolated and imported into most open and commercially available geographic information system (GIS) software. Further details on data and data handling are provided in Shevchenko et al. (2020).
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article 2020 United Kingdom, France, Finland, France, Czech Republic, Germany EnglishHAL CCSD EC | EPOS IP (676564), EC | SERA (730900)Beata Orlecka-Sikora; Stanislaw Lasocki; J. Kocot; Tomasz Szepieniec; Jean Robert Grasso; Alexander Garcia-Aristizabal; Marc Schaming; Pawel Urban; G.M. Jones; I. G. Stimpson; Savka Dineva; Piotr Sałek; Konstantinos Michail Leptokaropoulos; Grzegorz Lizurek; Dorota Olszewska; Jean Schmittbuhl; Grzegorz Kwiatek; Aglaja Blanke; Gilberto Saccorotti; Karolina Chodzińska; Łukasz Rudziński; Izabela Dobrzycka; Grzegorz Mutke; Adam Barański; Aleksandra Pierzyna; Elena Kozlovskaya; Jouni Nevalainen; Jannes Kinscher; Jan Sileny; Mariusz Sterzel; Szymon Cielesta; Tomáš Fischer;AbstractMining, water-reservoir impoundment, underground gas storage, geothermal energy exploitation and hydrocarbon extraction have the potential to cause rock deformation and earthquakes, which may be hazardous for people, infrastructure and the environment. Restricted access to data constitutes a barrier to assessing and mitigating the associated hazards. Thematic Core Service Anthropogenic Hazards (TCS AH) of the European Plate Observing System (EPOS) provides a novel e-research infrastructure. The core of this infrastructure, the IS-EPOS Platform (tcs.ah-epos.eu) connected to international data storage nodes offers open access to large grouped datasets (here termed episodes), comprising geoscientific and associated data from industrial activity along with a large set of embedded applications for their efficient data processing, analysis and visualization. The novel team-working features of the IS-EPOS Platform facilitate collaborative and interdisciplinary scientific research, public understanding of science, citizen science applications, knowledge dissemination, data-informed policy-making and the teaching of anthropogenic hazards related to georesource exploitation. TCS AH is one of 10 thematic core services forming EPOS, a solid earth science European Research Infrastructure Consortium (ERIC) (www.epos-ip.org).
Europe PubMed Centra... arrow_drop_down University of Oulu Repository - JultikaArticle . 2020Data sources: University of Oulu Repository - JultikaGFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2020Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesRepository of the Czech Academy of SciencesArticle . 2020Data sources: Repository of the Czech Academy of SciencesScientific DataArticle . 2020add ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.Do the share buttons not appear? Please make sure, any blocking addon is disabled, and then reload the page.All Research productsarrow_drop_down <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://www.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=10.1038/s41597-020-0429-3&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>
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visibility 2visibility views 2 download downloads 8 Powered bydescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article , Other literature type 2021 Germany English EC | EPOS IP (676564), EC | DESTRESS (691728)Jan Henninges; Evgeniia Martuganova; Manfred Stiller; Ben Norden; Charlotte M. Krawczyk;We performed so-far-unprecedented deep wireline vertical seismic profiling at the Groß Schönebeck site with the novel method of distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) to gain more detailed information on the structural setting and geometry of the geothermal reservoir, which is comprised of volcanic rocks and sediments of Lower Permian age. During the survey of 4 d only, we acquired data for 61 source positions using hybrid wireline fiber-optic sensor cables deployed in two 4.3 km deep, already existing wells. While most of the recorded data have a very good signal-to-noise ratio, individual sections of the profiles are affected by characteristic coherent noise patterns. This ringing noise results from incomplete coupling of the sensor cable to the borehole wall, and it can be suppressed to a large extent using suitable filtering methods. After conversion to strain rate, the DAS data exhibit a high similarity to the vertical component data of a conventional borehole geophone. We derived accurate time–depth relationships, interval velocities, and corridor stacks from the recorded data. Based on integration with other well data and geological information, we show that the top of a porous and permeable sandstone interval of the geothermal reservoir can be identified by a positive reflection event. Overall, the sequence of reflection events shows a different character for both wells explained by lateral changes in lithology. The top of the volcanic rocks has a somewhat different seismic response in both wells, and no clear reflection event is obvious at the postulated base of the volcanic rocks, so that their thickness cannot be inferred from individual reflection events in the seismic data alone. The DAS method enabled measurements at elevated temperatures up to 150 ∘C over extended periods and led to significant time and cost savings compared to deployment of a conventional borehole geophone string. This wireline approach finally suggests significant implications for observation options in old wells for a variety of purposes.
DepositOnce arrow_drop_down GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2021Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciencesadd ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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description Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Other literature type , Article 2018 Spain, Switzerland, Netherlands, France English EC | CSEM (714069), EC | EPOS IP (676564)Andreas Fichtner; Dirk Philip van Herwaarden; Michael Afanasiev; Saulė Simutė; Lion Krischer; Yeşim Çubuk-Sabuncu; Tuncay Taymaz; Lorenzo Colli; Erdinc Saygin; Antonio Villaseñor; Jeannot Trampert; Paul Cupillard; Hans-Peter Bunge; Heiner Igel;We present a general concept for evolutionary, collaborative, multiscale inversion of geophysical data, specifically applied to the construction of a first-generation Collaborative Seismic Earth Model. This is intended to address the limited resources of individual researchers and the often limited use of previously accumulated knowledge. Model evolution rests on a Bayesian updating scheme, simplified into a deterministic method that honors today's computational restrictions. The scheme is able to harness distributed human and computing power. It furthermore handles conflicting updates, as well as variable parameterizations of different model refinements or different inversion techniques. The first-generation Collaborative Seismic Earth Model comprises 12 refinements from full seismic waveform inversion, ranging from regional crustal- to continental-scale models. A global full-waveform inversion ensures that regional refinements translate into whole-Earth structure. ©2018. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved. This work was supported by the PASC project GeoScale, the CSCS computing time grant ch1, the European Research Council (ERC) under the EU’s Horizon 2020 programme (grant 714069), Istanbul Technical University, the National Science Council of Turkey, the A. v. Humboldt Foundation, and the EU-COST Action ES1401-TIDES-STSM. Andreas Fichtner et. al. Peer reviewed
Hyper Article en Lig... arrow_drop_down Geophysical Research LettersArticle . 2018Recolector de Ciencia Abierta, RECOLECTA; DIGITAL.CSICArticle . 2018add ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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visibility 7visibility views 7 download downloads 19 Powered bydescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article 2021 Switzerland, Germany English EC | SERA (730900), EC | EPOS IP (676564)Giovanni Lanzano; Lucia Luzi; Carlo Cauzzi; Jarek Bieńkowski; Dino Bindi; John Clinton; Massimo Cocco; Maria D'Amico; John Douglas; Licia Faenza; Chiara Felicetta; František Gallovič; Domenico Giardini; Olga-Joan Ktenidou; Valentino Lauciani; Maria Manakou; Alexandru Marmureanu; Emeline Maufroy; Alberto Michelini; Haluk Ozener; Rodolfo Puglia; Rajesh Rupakhety; Emiliano Russo; Mohammad P. Shahvar; Reinoud Sleeman; Nikolaos Theodoulidis;doi: 10.1785/0220200398
handle: 20.500.11850/494990
Strong ground motion records and free open access to strong‐motion data repositories are fundamental inputs to seismology, engineering seismology, soil dynamics, and earthquake engineering science and practice. This article presents the current status and outlook of the Observatories and Research Facilities for European Seismology (ORFEUS) coordinated strong‐motion seismology services, namely the rapid raw strong‐motion (RRSM) and the engineering strong‐motion (ESM) databases and associated web interfaces and webservices. We compare and discuss the role and use of these two systems using the Mw 6.5 Norcia (Central Italy) earthquake that occurred on 30 October 2016 as an example of a well‐recorded earthquake that triggered major interest in the seismological and earthquake engineering communities. The RRSM is a fully automated system for rapid dissemination of earthquake shaking information, whereas the ESM provides quality‐checked, manually processed waveforms and reviewed earthquake information. The RRSM uses only data from the European Integrated Waveform Data Archive, whereas the ESM also includes offline data from other sources, such as the ITalian ACcelerometric Archive (ITACA). Advanced software tools are also included in the ESM to allow users to process strong‐motion data and to select ground‐motion waveform sets for seismic structural analyses. The RRSM and ESM are complementary services designed for a variety of possible stakeholders, ranging from scientists to the educated general public. The RRSM and ESM are developed, organized, and reviewed by selected members of the seismological community in Europe, including strong‐motion data providers and expert users. Global access and usage of the data is encouraged. The ESM is presently the reference database for harmonized seismic hazard and risk studies in Europe. ORFEUS strong‐motion data are open, “Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable,” and accompanied by licensing information. The users are encouraged to properly cite the data providers, using the digital object identifiers of the seismic networks. © 2021 Seismological Society of America ISSN:0895-0695 ISSN:1938-2057
add ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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description Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article 2016 Italy, Germany English EC | EPOS IP (676564)Lucia Luzi; Rodolfo Puglia; Emiliano Russo; Maria D'Amico; Chiara Felicetta; Francesca Pacor; Giovanni Lanzano; Ulubey Çeken; John Clinton; Giovanni Costa; Llambro Duni; Esmael Farzanegan; Philippe Guéguen; Constantin Ionescu; I. Kalogeras; Haluk Ozener; Damiano Pesaresi; Reinoud Sleeman; Angelo Strollo; Mehdi Zare;doi: 10.1785/0220150278
This article describes the Engineering Strong‐Motion Database (ESM), developed in the framework of the European project Network of European Research Infrastructures for Earthquake Risk Assessment and Mitigation (NERA, see [Data and Resources][1]). ESM is specifically designed to provide end users only with quality‐checked, uniformly processed strong‐motion data and relevant parameters and has done so since 1969 in the Euro‐Mediterranean region. The database was designed for a large variety of stakeholders (expert seismologists, earthquake engineers, students, and professionals) with a user‐friendly and straightforward web interface. Users can access earthquake and station information and download waveforms of events with magnitude≥4.0 (unprocessed and processed acceleration, velocity, and displacement, and acceleration and displacement response spectra at 5% damping). Specific tools are also available to users to process strong‐motion data and select ground‐motion suites for code‐based seismic structural analyses. [1]: #sec-13
Archivio istituziona... arrow_drop_down GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2016Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesGFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2016Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciencesadd ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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description Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article , Other literature type 2022 Spain, Croatia, France, Croatia, Spain, Norway, Norway, Denmark, Germany English EC | EPOS (262229)Andrey Babeyko; Stefano Lorito; Francisco Hernandez; Jörn Lauterjung; Finn Løvholt; Alexander Rudloff; Mathilde Sørensen; Alexey Androsov; Inigo Aniel-Quiroga; Alberto Armigliato; Maria Ana Baptista; Enrico Baglione; Roberto Basili; Jörn Behrens; Beatriz Brizuela; Sergio Bruni; Didem Cambaz; Juan Cantavella Nadal; Fernando Carillho; Ian Chandler; Denis Chang-Seng; Marinos Charalampakis; Lorenzo Cugliari; Clea Denamiel; Gözde Güney Doğan; Gaetano Festa; David Fuhrman; Alice-Agnes Gabriel; Pauline Galea; Steven Gibbons; Mauricio González; Laura Graziani; Marc-André Gutscher; Sven Harig; Helene Hebert; Constantin Ionescu; Fatemeh Jalayer; Nikos Kalligeris; Utku Kânoğlu; Piero Lanucara; Jorge Macias Sánchez; Shane Murphy; Öcal Necmioğlu; Rachid Omira; Gerassimos Papadopoulos; Raphaël Paris; Fabrizio Romano; Tiziana Rossetto; Jacopo Selva; Antonio Scala; Roberto Tonini; Konstantinos Trevlopoulos; Ioanna Triantafyllou; Roger Urgeles; Roberto Vallone; Ivica Vilibić; Manuela Volpe; Ahmet Yalciner;doi: 10.4401/ag-8762
handle: 10261/274486 , 11250/3051251 , 11250/3054189
Tsunamis constitute a significant hazard for European coastal populations, and the impact of tsunami events worldwide can extend well beyond the coastal regions directly affected. Understanding the complex mechanisms of tsunami generation, propagation, and inundation, as well as managing the tsunami risk, requires multidisciplinary research and infrastructures that cross national boundaries. Recent decades have seen both great advances in tsunami science and consolidation of the European tsunami research community. A recurring theme has been the need for a sustainable platform for coordinated tsunami community activities and a hub for tsunami services. Following about three years of preparation, in July 2021, the European tsunami community attained the status of Candidate Thematic Core Service (cTCS) within the European Plate Observing System (EPOS) Research Infrastructure. Within a transition period of three years, the Tsunami candidate TCS is anticipated to develop into a fully operational EPOS TCS. We here outline the path taken to reach this point, and the envisaged form of the future EPOS TCS Tsunami. Our cTCS is planned to be organised within four thematic pillars: (1) Support to Tsunami Service Providers, (2) Tsunami Data, (3) Numerical Models, and (4) Hazard and Risk Products. We outline how identified needs in tsunami science and tsunami risk mitigation will be addressed within this structure and how participation within EPOS will become an integration point for community development Special issue EPOS a Research Infrastructure in solid Earth: open science and innovation .-- 21 pages, 8 figures With the institutional support of the ‘Severo Ochoa Centre of Excellence’ accreditation (CEX2019-000928-S) Peer reviewed
Bergen Open Research... arrow_drop_down Online Research Database In TechnologyArticle . 2022Data sources: Online Research Database In TechnologyAnnals of Geophysics; Croatian Scientific Bibliography - CROSBIOther literature type . Article . 2022ArchiMer - Institutional Archive of IfremerOther literature type . 2022Data sources: ArchiMer - Institutional Archive of IfremerGFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2022Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesRecolector de Ciencia Abierta, RECOLECTA; DIGITAL.CSICArticle . 2022Norwegian Geotechnical Institute (NGI) Digital ArchiveArticle . 2022Data sources: Norwegian Geotechnical Institute (NGI) Digital ArchiveHAL Descartes; HAL Clermont Université; HAL-CEAArticle . 2022add ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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Research data keyboard_double_arrow_right Dataset 2020 EnglishZenodo EC | VOLTAIC (705619), EC | EPOS IP (676564)von der Linden, Jens; Kimblin, Clare; McKenna, Ian; Bagley, Skyler; Li, Hsiao-Chi; Houim, Ryan; Kueny, Christopher S.; Kuhl, Allen; Grote, Dave; Converse, Mark; Vossen, Caron E. J.; Stern, Sönke; Cimarelli, Corrado; Sears, Jason;Background This data is camera images and nozzle pressure gauge voltage traces from rapid decompression shots at the LMU shock tube facility. This data is discussed in the "Materials and Methods" section of the paper "Standing Shock Prevents Propagation of Sparks in Supersonic Explosive Flows". Electric sparks and explosive flows have long been associated with each other. Flowing dust particles originate charge through contact and separate based on inertia, resulting in strong electric fields supporting sparks. These sparks can cause explosions in dusty environments, especially those rich in carbon, such as coal mines and grain elevators. Recent observations of explosive events in nature and decompression experiments indicate that supersonic flows of explosions may alter the electrical discharge process. Shocks may suppress parts of the hierarchy of the discharge phenomena, such as leaders. In our decompression experiments, a shock tube ejects a flow of gas and particles into an expansion chamber. We imaged an illuminated plume from the decompression of a mixture of argon and <100 mg of diamond particles and observe sparks occurring below the sharp boundary of a condensation cloud. We also performed hydrodynamics simulations of the decompression event that provide insight into the conditions supporting the observed behavior. Simulation results agree closely with the experimentally observed Mach disk shock shape and height. This represents direct evidence that the sparks are sculpted by the outflow. The spatial and temporal scale of the sparks transmit an impression of the shock tube flow, a connection that could enable novel instrumentation to diagnose currently inaccessible supersonic granular phenomena. Accessing Data The prefixes of the filenames correspond to the shot dates and times listed in table S1 of the paper. The "_camera.zip" files contains tiff images of the camera frames. The ".ixc" file in each zip lists camera settings in plain text. The ".dat" file contains the voltage measurement of the nozzle pressure gauge. Row 1 is the header, row 2 is the time in seconds, and row 3 is the voltage of the pressure gauge in Volts. The peak pressure in the header can be used to relate the voltage to pressure. This work was performed in part under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under contract DE-AC52-07NA27344, and Mission Support and Test Services, LLC, under Contract No. DE-NA0003624 with support from the Site-Directed Research and Development program, DOE/NV/03624--0956, and in part by the European Plate Observing Systems Transnational Access program of the European Community HORIZON 2020 research and innovation program under grant N 676564. CC acknowledges the support from the DFG grant CI 25/2-1 and from the European Community HORIZON 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska Curie grant nr. 705619. LLNL-MI-817289. This document was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States government. Neither the United States government nor Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, nor any of their employees makes any warranty, expressed or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, complete- ness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference herein to any specific com- mercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the United States government or Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC. The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States government or Lawrence Livermore National Security, LLC, and shall not be used for advertising or product endorsement purposes. {"references": ["C. Cimarelli, M. Alatorre-Ibargengoitia, U. Kueppers, B. Scheu, D. Dingwell, Experimen- tal generation of volcanic lightning. Geology 42, 79\u201382 (2014)"]}
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visibility 32visibility views 32 download downloads 26 Powered bydescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article , Other literature type 2022 Germany, Portugal, Switzerland, Norway English EC | EPOS SP (871121)Florian Haslinger; Roberto Basili; Rémy Bossu; Carlo Cauzzi; Fabrice Cotton; Helen Crowley; Susana Custodio; Laurentiu Danciu; Mario Locati; Alberto Michelini; Irene Molinari; Lars Ottemöller; Stefano Parolai;handle: 10451/53665 , 20.500.11850/549765 , 11250/3058781
In this article we describe EPOS Seismology, the Thematic Core Service consortium for the seismology domain within the European Plate Observing System infrastructure. EPOS Seismology was developed alongside the build-up of EPOS during the last decade, in close collaboration between the existing pan-European seismological initiatives ORFEUS (Observatories and Research Facilities for European Seismology), EMSC (Euro-Mediterranean Seismological Center) and EFEHR (European Facilities for Earthquake Hazard and Risk) and their respective communities. It provides on one hand a governance framework that allows a well-coordinated interaction of the seismological community services with EPOS and its bodies, and on the other hand it strengthens the coordination among the already existing seismological initiatives with regard to data, products and service provisioning and further development. Within the EPOS Delivery Framework, ORFEUS, EMSC and EFEHR provide a wide range of services that allow open access to a vast amount of seismological data and products, following and implementing the FAIR principles and supporting open science. Services include access to raw seismic waveforms of thousands of stations together with relevant station and data quality information, parametric earthquake information of recent and historical earthquakes together with advanced event-specific products like moment tensors or source models and further ancillary services, and comprehensive seismic hazard and risk information, covering latest European scale models and their underlying data. The services continue to be available on the well-established domain-specific platforms and websites, and are also consecutively integrated with the interoperable central EPOS data infrastructure. EPOS Seismology and its participating organizations provide a consistent framework for the future development of these services and their operation as EPOS services, closely coordinated also with other international seismological initiatives, and is well set to represent the European seismological research infrastructures and their stakeholders within EPOS. Annals of Geophysics, 65 (2) ISSN:1593-5213
Annals of Geophysics arrow_drop_down Universidade de Lisboa: Repositório.ULOther literature type . 2022Data sources: Universidade de Lisboa: Repositório.ULGFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2022Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciencesadd ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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visibility 23visibility views 23 download downloads 26 Powered bydescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article 2019 United Kingdom, Germany, Netherlands English EC | EPOS IP (676564), EC | SHEER (640896)Cielesta, Szymon; Orlecka-Sikora, Beata; Staszek, Monika; Urban, Paweł; Olszewska, Dorota; Ruigrok, Elmer; Toon, Sam; Picozzi, Matteo; Kwiatek, Grzegorz; Cesca, Simone; López Comino, José Angel; Isherwood, Catherine; Montcoudiol, Nelly; Jarosławski, Janusz; non-UU output of UU-AW members;handle: 1874/380353
The SHEER database brings together a large amount of data of various types: interdisciplinary site data from seven independent episodes, research data and those for the project results dissemination process. This concerns mainly shale gas exploitation test sites, processing procedures, results of data interpretation and recommendations. The smart SHEER database harmonizes data from different fields (geophysical, geochemical, geological, technological, etc.), creates and provides access to an advanced database of case studies of environmental impact indicators associated with shale gas exploitation and exploration, which previously did not exist. A unique component of the SHEER database comes from the monitoring activity performed during the project in one active shale gas exploration and exploitation site at Wysin, Poland, which started from the pre-operational phase. The SHEER database is capable of the adoption of new data such as results of other Work Packages and has developed an over-arching structure for higher-level integration.
GFZ German Research ... arrow_drop_down GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2019Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesActa GeophysicaArticle . 2019 . 2018GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2019Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciencesadd ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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visibility 0visibility views 0 download downloads 5 Powered bydescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Research 2020 Germany EnglishGFZ Data Services EC | EPOS IP (676564)Shevchenko, A.; Dvigalo, V.; Walter, T.; Mania, R.;Shevchenko, A.; Dvigalo, V.; Walter, T.; Mania, R.;Decades of photogrammetric records at Bezymianny, one of the most active volcanoes on Earth, allow unveiling morphological changes, eruption and intrusion dynamics, erosion, lava and tephra deposition processes. This data publication releases an almost 7-decade long record, retrieved from airborne, satellite, and UAV platforms. The Kamchatkan Institute of Volcanology and Seismology released archives of high-resolution aerial images acquired in 1967-2013. We complemented the aerial datasets with 2017 Pleiades tri-stereo satellite and UAV images. The images were processed using Erdas Imagine and Photomod software. Here we publish nine quality-controlled point clouds in LAS format referenced to the WGS84 (UTM zone 57N). By comparing the point clouds we were able to describe topographic changes and calculate volumetric differences, details of which were further analyzed in Shevchenko et al. (2020, https://doi.org/...). The ~5-decade-long photogrammetric record was achieved by 8 aerial and 1 satellite-UAV datasets. The 8 sets of near nadir aerial photographs acquired in 1967, 1968, 1976, 1977, 1982, 1994, 2006, and 2013 were taken with various photogrammetry cameras dedicated for topographic analysis, specifically the AFA 41-10 camera (1967, 1968, 1976, and 1977; focal length = 99.086 mm), the TAFA 10 camera (1982 and 1994; focal length = 99.120 mm), and the AFA TE-140 camera (2006 and 2013; focal length = 139.536 mm). These analog cameras have all an 18×18 cm frame size. The acquisition flight altitude above the mean surface of Bezymianny varied from 1,500-2,500 m above mean surface elevation, translating up to >5,000 m above sea level. For photogrammetric processing, we used 3-4 consecutive shots that provided a 60-70% forward overlap. The analog photo negatives were digitized by scanning with Epson Perfection V750 Pro scanner in a resolution of 2,400 pixels/inch (approx. pixel (px) size = 0.01 mm). The mean scale within a single photograph depends on the distance to the surface and corresponds on average to 1:10,000-1:20,000. Thus, each px in the scanned image represents about 10-20 cm resolution on the ground. The coordinates of 12 ground control points were derived from a Theo 010B theodolite dataset collected at geodetic benchmarks during a 1977 fieldwork. These benchmarks were established on the slopes of Bezymianny before the 1977 aerial survey and then captured with the AFA 41-10 aerial camera. The most recent was a satellite dataset acquired on 2017-09-09 by the PHR 1B sensor aboard the Pleiades satellite (AIRBUS Defence & Space) operated by the French space agency (CNES). The forward, nadir and backward camera configuration allows revisiting any point on earth and was tasked for the acquisition of Bezymianny to provide a 0.5 m resolution panchromatic imagery dataset. In order to improve the Pleiades data, we complemented them with UAV data collected on 2017-07-29 with DJI Mavic Pro during fieldwork at Bezymianny. This data publication includes a description of the data (in pdf format) and the nine processed and controlled three-dimensional point clouds (in LAS format). The point clouds can be easily interpolated and imported into most open and commercially available geographic information system (GIS) software. Further details on data and data handling are provided in Shevchenko et al. (2020).
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eudescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article 2020 United Kingdom, France, Finland, France, Czech Republic, Germany EnglishHAL CCSD EC | EPOS IP (676564), EC | SERA (730900)Beata Orlecka-Sikora; Stanislaw Lasocki; J. Kocot; Tomasz Szepieniec; Jean Robert Grasso; Alexander Garcia-Aristizabal; Marc Schaming; Pawel Urban; G.M. Jones; I. G. Stimpson; Savka Dineva; Piotr Sałek; Konstantinos Michail Leptokaropoulos; Grzegorz Lizurek; Dorota Olszewska; Jean Schmittbuhl; Grzegorz Kwiatek; Aglaja Blanke; Gilberto Saccorotti; Karolina Chodzińska; Łukasz Rudziński; Izabela Dobrzycka; Grzegorz Mutke; Adam Barański; Aleksandra Pierzyna; Elena Kozlovskaya; Jouni Nevalainen; Jannes Kinscher; Jan Sileny; Mariusz Sterzel; Szymon Cielesta; Tomáš Fischer;AbstractMining, water-reservoir impoundment, underground gas storage, geothermal energy exploitation and hydrocarbon extraction have the potential to cause rock deformation and earthquakes, which may be hazardous for people, infrastructure and the environment. Restricted access to data constitutes a barrier to assessing and mitigating the associated hazards. Thematic Core Service Anthropogenic Hazards (TCS AH) of the European Plate Observing System (EPOS) provides a novel e-research infrastructure. The core of this infrastructure, the IS-EPOS Platform (tcs.ah-epos.eu) connected to international data storage nodes offers open access to large grouped datasets (here termed episodes), comprising geoscientific and associated data from industrial activity along with a large set of embedded applications for their efficient data processing, analysis and visualization. The novel team-working features of the IS-EPOS Platform facilitate collaborative and interdisciplinary scientific research, public understanding of science, citizen science applications, knowledge dissemination, data-informed policy-making and the teaching of anthropogenic hazards related to georesource exploitation. TCS AH is one of 10 thematic core services forming EPOS, a solid earth science European Research Infrastructure Consortium (ERIC) (www.epos-ip.org).
Europe PubMed Centra... arrow_drop_down University of Oulu Repository - JultikaArticle . 2020Data sources: University of Oulu Repository - JultikaGFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2020Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesRepository of the Czech Academy of SciencesArticle . 2020Data sources: Repository of the Czech Academy of SciencesScientific DataArticle . 2020add ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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visibility 2visibility views 2 download downloads 8 Powered bydescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article , Other literature type 2021 Germany English EC | EPOS IP (676564), EC | DESTRESS (691728)Jan Henninges; Evgeniia Martuganova; Manfred Stiller; Ben Norden; Charlotte M. Krawczyk;We performed so-far-unprecedented deep wireline vertical seismic profiling at the Groß Schönebeck site with the novel method of distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) to gain more detailed information on the structural setting and geometry of the geothermal reservoir, which is comprised of volcanic rocks and sediments of Lower Permian age. During the survey of 4 d only, we acquired data for 61 source positions using hybrid wireline fiber-optic sensor cables deployed in two 4.3 km deep, already existing wells. While most of the recorded data have a very good signal-to-noise ratio, individual sections of the profiles are affected by characteristic coherent noise patterns. This ringing noise results from incomplete coupling of the sensor cable to the borehole wall, and it can be suppressed to a large extent using suitable filtering methods. After conversion to strain rate, the DAS data exhibit a high similarity to the vertical component data of a conventional borehole geophone. We derived accurate time–depth relationships, interval velocities, and corridor stacks from the recorded data. Based on integration with other well data and geological information, we show that the top of a porous and permeable sandstone interval of the geothermal reservoir can be identified by a positive reflection event. Overall, the sequence of reflection events shows a different character for both wells explained by lateral changes in lithology. The top of the volcanic rocks has a somewhat different seismic response in both wells, and no clear reflection event is obvious at the postulated base of the volcanic rocks, so that their thickness cannot be inferred from individual reflection events in the seismic data alone. The DAS method enabled measurements at elevated temperatures up to 150 ∘C over extended periods and led to significant time and cost savings compared to deployment of a conventional borehole geophone string. This wireline approach finally suggests significant implications for observation options in old wells for a variety of purposes.
DepositOnce arrow_drop_down GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2021Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciencesadd ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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description Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Other literature type , Article 2018 Spain, Switzerland, Netherlands, France English EC | CSEM (714069), EC | EPOS IP (676564)Andreas Fichtner; Dirk Philip van Herwaarden; Michael Afanasiev; Saulė Simutė; Lion Krischer; Yeşim Çubuk-Sabuncu; Tuncay Taymaz; Lorenzo Colli; Erdinc Saygin; Antonio Villaseñor; Jeannot Trampert; Paul Cupillard; Hans-Peter Bunge; Heiner Igel;We present a general concept for evolutionary, collaborative, multiscale inversion of geophysical data, specifically applied to the construction of a first-generation Collaborative Seismic Earth Model. This is intended to address the limited resources of individual researchers and the often limited use of previously accumulated knowledge. Model evolution rests on a Bayesian updating scheme, simplified into a deterministic method that honors today's computational restrictions. The scheme is able to harness distributed human and computing power. It furthermore handles conflicting updates, as well as variable parameterizations of different model refinements or different inversion techniques. The first-generation Collaborative Seismic Earth Model comprises 12 refinements from full seismic waveform inversion, ranging from regional crustal- to continental-scale models. A global full-waveform inversion ensures that regional refinements translate into whole-Earth structure. ©2018. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved. This work was supported by the PASC project GeoScale, the CSCS computing time grant ch1, the European Research Council (ERC) under the EU’s Horizon 2020 programme (grant 714069), Istanbul Technical University, the National Science Council of Turkey, the A. v. Humboldt Foundation, and the EU-COST Action ES1401-TIDES-STSM. Andreas Fichtner et. al. Peer reviewed
Hyper Article en Lig... arrow_drop_down Geophysical Research LettersArticle . 2018Recolector de Ciencia Abierta, RECOLECTA; DIGITAL.CSICArticle . 2018add ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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visibility 7visibility views 7 download downloads 19 Powered bydescription Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article 2021 Switzerland, Germany English EC | SERA (730900), EC | EPOS IP (676564)Giovanni Lanzano; Lucia Luzi; Carlo Cauzzi; Jarek Bieńkowski; Dino Bindi; John Clinton; Massimo Cocco; Maria D'Amico; John Douglas; Licia Faenza; Chiara Felicetta; František Gallovič; Domenico Giardini; Olga-Joan Ktenidou; Valentino Lauciani; Maria Manakou; Alexandru Marmureanu; Emeline Maufroy; Alberto Michelini; Haluk Ozener; Rodolfo Puglia; Rajesh Rupakhety; Emiliano Russo; Mohammad P. Shahvar; Reinoud Sleeman; Nikolaos Theodoulidis;doi: 10.1785/0220200398
handle: 20.500.11850/494990
Strong ground motion records and free open access to strong‐motion data repositories are fundamental inputs to seismology, engineering seismology, soil dynamics, and earthquake engineering science and practice. This article presents the current status and outlook of the Observatories and Research Facilities for European Seismology (ORFEUS) coordinated strong‐motion seismology services, namely the rapid raw strong‐motion (RRSM) and the engineering strong‐motion (ESM) databases and associated web interfaces and webservices. We compare and discuss the role and use of these two systems using the Mw 6.5 Norcia (Central Italy) earthquake that occurred on 30 October 2016 as an example of a well‐recorded earthquake that triggered major interest in the seismological and earthquake engineering communities. The RRSM is a fully automated system for rapid dissemination of earthquake shaking information, whereas the ESM provides quality‐checked, manually processed waveforms and reviewed earthquake information. The RRSM uses only data from the European Integrated Waveform Data Archive, whereas the ESM also includes offline data from other sources, such as the ITalian ACcelerometric Archive (ITACA). Advanced software tools are also included in the ESM to allow users to process strong‐motion data and to select ground‐motion waveform sets for seismic structural analyses. The RRSM and ESM are complementary services designed for a variety of possible stakeholders, ranging from scientists to the educated general public. The RRSM and ESM are developed, organized, and reviewed by selected members of the seismological community in Europe, including strong‐motion data providers and expert users. Global access and usage of the data is encouraged. The ESM is presently the reference database for harmonized seismic hazard and risk studies in Europe. ORFEUS strong‐motion data are open, “Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable,” and accompanied by licensing information. The users are encouraged to properly cite the data providers, using the digital object identifiers of the seismic networks. © 2021 Seismological Society of America ISSN:0895-0695 ISSN:1938-2057
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You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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description Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article 2016 Italy, Germany English EC | EPOS IP (676564)Lucia Luzi; Rodolfo Puglia; Emiliano Russo; Maria D'Amico; Chiara Felicetta; Francesca Pacor; Giovanni Lanzano; Ulubey Çeken; John Clinton; Giovanni Costa; Llambro Duni; Esmael Farzanegan; Philippe Guéguen; Constantin Ionescu; I. Kalogeras; Haluk Ozener; Damiano Pesaresi; Reinoud Sleeman; Angelo Strollo; Mehdi Zare;doi: 10.1785/0220150278
This article describes the Engineering Strong‐Motion Database (ESM), developed in the framework of the European project Network of European Research Infrastructures for Earthquake Risk Assessment and Mitigation (NERA, see [Data and Resources][1]). ESM is specifically designed to provide end users only with quality‐checked, uniformly processed strong‐motion data and relevant parameters and has done so since 1969 in the Euro‐Mediterranean region. The database was designed for a large variety of stakeholders (expert seismologists, earthquake engineers, students, and professionals) with a user‐friendly and straightforward web interface. Users can access earthquake and station information and download waveforms of events with magnitude≥4.0 (unprocessed and processed acceleration, velocity, and displacement, and acceleration and displacement response spectra at 5% damping). Specific tools are also available to users to process strong‐motion data and select ground‐motion suites for code‐based seismic structural analyses. [1]: #sec-13
Archivio istituziona... arrow_drop_down GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2016Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesGFZ German Research Centre for GeosciencesArticle . 2016Data sources: GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciencesadd ClaimPlease grant OpenAIRE to access and update your ORCID works.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
You have already added works in your ORCID record related to the merged Research product.This Research product is the result of merged Research products in OpenAIRE.
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For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eu69 citations 69 popularity Substantial influence Average impulse Average Powered by BIP!
description Publicationkeyboard_double_arrow_right Article , Other literature type 2022 Spain, Croatia, France, Croatia, Spain, Norway, Norway, Denmark, Germany English EC | EPOS (262229)Andrey Babeyko; Stefano Lorito; Francisco Hernandez; Jörn Lauterjung; Finn Løvholt; Alexander Rudloff; Mathilde Sørensen; Alexey Androsov; Inigo Aniel-Quiroga; Alberto Armigliato; Maria Ana Baptista; Enrico Baglione; Roberto Basili; Jörn Behrens;