Monitoring the Vertical Distribution of Rainfall-Induced Strain Changes in a Landslide Measured by Distributed Fiber Optic Sensing With Rayleigh Backscattering

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Abstract

Distributed fiber optic sensing with Rayleigh backscattering, which has been recognized as a novel technique for measuring differences in temperature or strain, was adopted in a borehole to a depth of 16 m in an actual landslide to detect a vertical profile of strain changes. Strain changes were measured every 6 hr from 19 June 2017 to 18 October 2017 with a spatial resolution of 10 cm and strain resolution of 1.87 με. The measurements provided a clear-cut vertical profile of the strain changes caused by rainfalls that cannot be detected by conventional methods. The results show that there are two types of deformation in the landslide mass: (1) sliding at the boundary between tuff and mudstone and (2) creep in mudstone layers. Activation of deeper sections of the landslide by heavy rainfalls has also been detected.

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Kogure, T., & Okuda, Y. (2018). Monitoring the Vertical Distribution of Rainfall-Induced Strain Changes in a Landslide Measured by Distributed Fiber Optic Sensing With Rayleigh Backscattering. Geophysical Research Letters, 45(9), 4033–4040. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018GL077607

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