Earlier this year, when there was that significant series of quakes near Ridgecrest, CA, during one of the live news reports from Cal Tech, they experienced a 5.0 aftershock as seen on their seismographs. Anyway, we live about 130 miles from Ridgecrest and while we were watching the news cast they showed how the ground wave was propagating outward from the epicenter of the aftershock, and right on schedule, as we watched the wave pass our city on the TV screen we felt it shake the house. Now, being 130 miles away, even a 5.0 was not going to do any damage but it did show how indeed, as
VEIBLL had noted, the seismic wave moves much slower than the speed-of-light, which is closer to what the data from the seismograph was traveling to Cal Tech and then being broadcast to our TV.
Anyway, it did demonstrate how an alert system could be helpful in providing some sort of 'early warning', even if it were only few seconds. Of course the real value would be to trigger automatic systems, like starting emergency generators at hospitals, isolating power grids, and gas and oil pipelines, stopping and opening the doors of elevators, brings trains and subways to a safe stop, etc. again as
VEIBLL mentioned.
John R. Baker, P.E. (ret)
EX-Product 'Evangelist'
Irvine, CA
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