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Hable, Sarah; Sigloch, Karin; Barruol, Guilhem; Staehler, Simon C.; Hadziioannou, Celine. |
Many applications in seismology rely on the accurate absolute timing of seismograms. However, both seismological land stations and ocean bottom seismometers (OBSs) can be affected by clock errors, which cause the absolute timing of seismograms to deviate from a highly accurate reference time signal, usually provided by GPS satellites. Timing problems can occur in land stations when synchronization with a GPS signal is temporarily or permanently lost. This can give rise to complicated, time-dependent clock drifts relative to GPS time, due to varying environmental conditions. Seismometers at the ocean bottom cannot receive GPS satellite signals, but operate in more stable ambient conditions than land stations. The standard protocol is to synchronize an OBS... |
Tipo: Text |
Palavras-chave: Time-series analysis; Seismic instruments; Seismic interferometry; Seismic noise. |
Ano: 2018 |
URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00444/55599/57230.pdf |
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