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Ionospheric Signatures of Tohoku-Oki Tsunami of March 11, 2011: Model Comparisons Near the Epicenter

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In this paper, the effect of the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami on the ionosphere near the epicenter was observed in measurements of ionospheric total electron content from 1198 GPS receivers in the Japanese GEONET network.
Abstract
[1] We observe ionospheric perturbations caused by the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami of March 11, 2011. Perturbations near the epicenter were found in measurements of ionospheric total electron content (TEC) from 1198 GPS receivers in the Japanese GEONET network. For the first time for this event, we compare these observations with the estimated magnitude and speed of a tsunami-driven atmospheric gravity wave, using an atmosphere-ionosphere-coupling model and a tsunami model of sea-surface height, respectively. Traveling ionospheric disturbances (TIDs) were observed moving away from the epicenter at approximate speeds of 3400 m/s, 1000 m/s and 200–300 m/s, consistent with Rayleigh waves, acoustic waves, and gravity waves, respectively. We focus our analysis on gravity waves moving south and east of the epicenter, since tsunamis propagating in the deep ocean have been shown to produce gravity waves detectable in ionospheric TEC in the past. Observed southeastward gravity wave perturbations, seen ∼60 min after the earthquake, are mostly between 0.5 to 1.5 TECU, representing up to ∼5% of the background vertical TEC (VTEC). Comparisons of observed TID gravity waves with the modeled tsunami speed in the ocean and the predicted VTEC perturbation amplitudes from an atmosphere-ionosphere-coupling model show the measurements and models to be in close agreement. Due to the dense GPS network and high earthquake magnitude, these are the clearest observations to date of the effect of a major earthquake and tsunami on the ionosphere near the epicenter. Such observations from a future real-time GPS receiver network could be used to validate tsunami models, confirm the existence of a tsunami, or track its motion where in situ buoy data is not available.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Internal atmospheric gravity waves at ionospheric heights

TL;DR: In this paper, the proper interpretation of irregular motions in the upper atmosphere has been investigated by a variety of techniques, but their proper interpretation has yet to be established. But their proper meaning has not yet been established.
Journal ArticleDOI

A global mapping technique for GPS‐derived ionospheric total electron content measurements

TL;DR: In this paper, a technique for retrieving the global distribution of vertical total electron content (TEC) from GPS-based measurements is described, based on interpolating TEC within triangular tiles that tessellate the ionosphere modeled as a thin spherical shell.
Journal ArticleDOI

GPS detection of ionospheric perturbations following the January 17, 1994, Northridge Earthquake

TL;DR: In this article, the ionospheric electron content time series for several days preceding and following the January 17, 1994, M(sub w) = 6.7 Northridge earthquake was used to compute ionoispheric electron density.

Implementation and testing of the Method of Splitting Tsunami (MOST) model

TL;DR: A suite of numerical simulation codes, known collectively as the MOST (Method of Splitting Tsunami) model, has been implemented and tested as discussed by the authors, which is capable of simulating three processes of tsunami evolution, i.e., generation by an earthquake, transoceanic propagation and inundation of dry land.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ionospheric detection of gravity waves induced by tsunamis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the GEONET network in Japan to image small-scale perturbations of the Total Electron Content above Japan and up to 400 km off shore.
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