Detecting an earthquake is just not enough for early warning. We need to assess severity of warning too, before we disseminate the warning. Severity of earthquake is estimated through Richter scale conventionally. Modern techniques use moment magnitude scale. For our experiments, we wish to predict magnitude of the earthquake as soon we make estimation about hypocenter using Richter Scale.
The Richter magnitude of an earthquake is determined from the logarithm of the amplitude of waves recorded by seismographs. The original formula is for Magnitude ML is:
where A is the maximum excursion of the Wood-Anderson seismograph, the empirical function A0 depends only on the distance of the station from epicenter,
. In practice, readings from all observing stations are averaged after adjustment with station-specific corrections to obtain the
value. Reader should see the chart below to a feel of what does Richter magnitude translates to in terms of shaking:
However, CSN sensors are not as quite accurate as seismogram when it comes to detecting absolute value of acceleration. However, with quantity and ample data, we can make corrections, find correct parameters to estimate Richter scale merely from cost effective accelerometers, that too within seconds of event happening.
We assume following equation for our magnitude estimation:
M(A, D)= α log10 A + β log10D
Where A is the maximum magnitude of acceleration recorded by the sensor in the T = 10 second period, and D is the distance from estimated hypocenter. For the experiment only, we assume true hypocenter to estimated hypocenter.