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István Bondár

Researcher at Hungarian Academy of Sciences

Publications -  52
Citations -  1769

István Bondár is an academic researcher from Hungarian Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Infrasound & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 48 publications receiving 1392 citations. Previous affiliations of István Bondár include International Seismological Centre & Science Applications International Corporation.

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Public Release of the ISC-GEM Global Instrumental Earthquake Catalogue (1900-2009)

TL;DR: The International Seismological Centre-Global Earthquake Model (ISC-GEM) Global Instrumental Earthquake Catalogue (1900-2009) is the result of a special effort to substantially extend and improve currently existing global catalogs to serve the requirements of specific user groups who assess and model seismic hazard and risk as discussed by the authors.
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Epicentre accuracy based on seismic network criteria

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used Monte Carlo simulations of network geometry to estimate the location of the epicentre of a large number of earthquakes and nuclear explosions in published seismic bulletins.
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Improved location procedures at the International Seismological Centre

TL;DR: In this article, a new location algorithm for the ISC that accounts for correlated error structure, and uses all IASPEI standard phases with a valid k135 traveltime prediction to obtain more accurate event locations.
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The AlpArray Seismic Network: A Large-Scale European Experiment to Image the Alpine Orogen

TL;DR: The goals, construction, deployment, characteristics and data management of the AlpArray Seismic Network, which will provide data that is expected to be unprecedented in quality to image the complex Alpine mountains at depth, are presented.
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The ISC-GEM Global Instrumental Earthquake Catalogue (1900-2009): Introduction

TL;DR: The ISC-GEM Global Instrumental Earthquake Catalogue (1900-2009) as discussed by the authors is a collection of approximately 20,000 large earthquakes covering 110 years with hypocentres and uncertainties computed using the same technique and velocity model.