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Dryad

Data from: Explosion-generated infrasound recorded on ground and airborne microbarometers at regional distances

Cite this dataset

Young, Eliot F. et al. (2019). Data from: Explosion-generated infrasound recorded on ground and airborne microbarometers at regional distances [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.354kg7d

Abstract

Recent work in deploying infrasound (low frequency sound) sensors on aerostats and free flying balloons has shown them to be viable alternatives to ground stations. However, no study to date has compared the performance of surface and free floating infrasound microbarometers with respect to acoustic events at regional (100s of kilometers) range. The prospect of enhanced detection of aerial explosions at similar ranges, such as those from bolides, has not been investigated either. We examined infrasound signals from three 1 ton TNT equivalent explosions using microbarometers on two separate balloons at ranges of 280 to 400 km and ground stations at ranges of 6.3 to 350 km. Signal celerities were consistent with acoustic waves traveling in the stratospheric duct. However, significant differences were noted between the observed arrival patterns and those predicted by an acoustic propagation model. Very low background noise levels on the balloons were consistent with previous studies that suggest wind interference is minimal on freely drifting sensors. Simulated propagation patterns and observed noise levels also confirm that balloon-borne microbarometers should be very effective at detecting explosions in the middle and upper atmosphere as well as those on the surface.

README: Data from: Explosion-generated infrasound recorded on ground and airborne microbarometers at regional distances

https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.354kg7d

Give a brief summary of dataset contents, contextualized in experimental procedures and results.

Description of the data and file structure

The data come in four tar archives that must be downloaded and combined using the following shell commands:

There are two types of data included in this repository: raw digitizer output files in a proprietary format, and data converted into physical units (Pascals) in Seismic Analysis Code (SAC) format. Both types are provided for traceability purposes.

The Seismic Analysis Code (SAC) file format is one of the most commonly used formats used in seismic studies. It can be read by a variety of programming languages, including the Obspy library in Python and RSEIS in R. It also has a standalone interactive program. A good reference for SAC is here:
http://ds.iris.edu/files/sac-manual/manual/file_format.html
The raw digitizer output consists of files written by the Omnirecs (now DiGOS) Datacube unit. The manufacturer provides several methods of extracting data from these files. Programs for data extraction are located here:
https://digos.eu/seismology/

Usage notes

Download the data file, unzip it, and then run the following shell commands to concatenate and then uncompress the files:

cat usie.tgz.* | tar xzv

Funding

Southwest Research Institute