GPS To Monitor/Predict Seismic Stresses
webNazi points to this story at CNET, writing: "With over 250 GPS monitoring stations installed over the last ten years, the monitoring stations will provide continuous data--for 50 years or more--about otherwise imperceptible shifts in the Earth's crust. The network is so precise it can record as little as 0.04 inches of distortion of the ground or movement along a fault."
I'm still looking for a GPS that will have that kind of accuracy. The Military has it, but they also have the access codes that change something like 10,000 times a second and map downfeeds to the units. I also know Farmers found a work arround that includes one stationary unit that ties into a computer to tell the other unit(s) that no you did not just move 10.342841 meters to the north, so don't turn the grain harvister yet. But what about me?
Who wants Pork Chops?
OK,
- B
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http://www.bradheintz.com/
- updated
http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/suominet/
http://www.unavco.ucar.edu/equipment/suominet/
SuomiNet is a national network of GPS receivers, located primarily at universities, configured and managed to generate near real-time estimates of precipitable water vapor in the atmosphere, total electron content in the ionosphere, and other meteorological and geodetic information.
Example use of this data can be found at:
http://www.gst.ucar.edu/gpsrg/realtime.html
Neat stuff! Now if only the data from these fixed GPS sites were easily available via the web ...
i am going to ask a question.
how in the hell can a bunch of satellites measure within a fraction of an inch over the course of 50 years when we have enough trouble just making clocks with that similar magnitude of accuracy without using atomic mechanisms.
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