At the beginning of 2002 an OmniPAL receiver was put into operation at the Department of Physics of Bari University (Southern Italy). The electric field strength of five VLF-LF signals transmitted from United Kingdom (f= 16 kHz), France (f=20.9 kHz), Germany (f=23.4 kHz), Iceland (f=37.5 kHz) and Italy (f=54 kHz) has been monitoring with a 5 s sampling frequency. In a first step we reduced the amount of the data taking one datum each 10 min (mean of the ±5 min raw data) and then we smoothed these data by a running adjacent averaging over 7 days. Analysing the trends we obtained, we revealed at first in the signal from the Italian transmitter two clear intensity decreases in April 2002 and in August-September 2002. At these times we observed earthquakes with M=43 and M=5.6 respectively near the transmitter-receiver path and a precursory effect in the previous decreases appeared. Then, we noted that all of the five radio trends in the time interval March 2002-February 2003 are more disturbed than in other periods; in particular an evident simultaneous decrease appears in January-February 2003. We propose that these disturbances are related to general excitation of the margin between the African and European plates. In a second step we examined the terminator time (evening) changes for the Italian transmitter in July-September 2002, and we found significant deviations from the mean value at the end of August, which is supportive for some precursory ionospheric signature of earthquakes. © European Geosciences Union 2004.
CITATION STYLE
Biagi, P. F., Piccolo, R., Castellana, L., Maggipinto, T., Ermini, A., Martellucci, S., … Ohta, K. (2004). VLF-LF radio signals collected at Bari (South Italy): A preliminary analysis on signal anomalies associated with earthquakes. Natural Hazards and Earth System Science, 4(5–6), 685–689. https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-4-685-2004
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.