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  • 11
    Mar
    2013
    7:23pm, EDT

    Two years ago, Japan's huge Tohoku quake was 'heard' in outer space

    The earthquake and tsunami that left almost 19,000 people dead and displaced hundreds of thousands more was remembered with moments of silence and prayer. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

     

    By Becky Oskin
    LiveScience

    Earthquakes rattle the ground, vibrating Earth's surface like the skin of a drum and sending low-frequency sound waves into the sky.

    The tremendous shaking from Japan's Tohoku earthquake in 2011, the fourth-biggest temblor on record, was so powerful the sound traveled into space, a new study reports.


    The acoustic waves, called infrasound, jiggled the European Space Agency's GOCE satellite, which measures tiny variations in Earth's gravity field. The satellite was designed to maintain an ultra-stable orbit by automatically adjusting for such variations. Researchers used a computer model to analyze and extract the satellite's response to the infrasound waves and compute their frequency.

    The satellite tracked the acoustic waves twice, passing through the atmospheric disturbance over the Pacific Ocean about 30 minutes after the quake and over Europe at about an hour later. The GOCE satellite was 140 miles (225 kilometers) above Earth. This is the first time a satellite has directly recorded infrasound in space, the European Space Agency said in a statement. The findings will appear in an upcoming issue of the journal Geophysical Research Letters. [See how the satellite tracked the infrasound.]

    "Seismologists are particularly excited by this discovery because they were virtually the only Earth scientists without a space-based instrument directly comparable to those deployed on the ground," Raphael Garcia, lead study author, said in a statement. "With this new tool, they can start to look up into space to understand what is going on under their feet," said Garcia, a physicist with the Research Institute in Astrophysics and Planetology in France.

    ESA / IRAP / CNES / TU Delft / HTG / Planetary Visions

    Japan's Tohoku earthquake in 2011 was felt by the GOCE satellite.

    Watch on YouTube

    For decades, ground-based and underwater infrasound detectors have tracked the deep resonance for research and for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization. Earthquakes, bomb explosions and even meteors shattering in the sky can send acoustic ripples through the atmosphere.The Tohoku earthquake's sound waves were also recorded by ground-based infrasound networks.

    The magnitude-9.0 Tohoku earthquake, which struck two years ago today, was also powerful enough to slightly alter Earth's gravity field under Japan.

    Email Becky Oskin or follow her @beckyoskin. Follow us @OAPlanet, Facebook or Google+. Original article on LiveScience's OurAmazingPlanet.

    • Video: See & Hear the Japan Earthquake
    • 7 Craziest Ways Japan's Earthquake Affected Earth
    • Infographic: How Japan's 2011 Earthquake Happened

    Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 

    27 comments

    The report is confused, but it does say early on that the satellite was responding to variations in Earth's gravitational field, not to sound waves.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: space, featured, tokohu-earthquake, acoustic-waves, european-space-agencys-goce-satellite

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