Dear colleagues,
It is our pleasure to invite you to contribute to the session S28 entitled
"Applications and developments in ambient noise seismology" to be held during
the 36th General Assembly of the European Seismological Commission in Valletta, Malta,
during 2-7 September 2018 (
http://www.escmalta2018.eu/page/home).
This session welcomes contributions focused on ambient noise seismology.
Abstract submission will run until 31-March-2018.
Please do not hesitate to contact us regarding the suitability of your work for this
session. We look forward to receiving your submissions and seeing you in Malta in
September!
Best wishes,
Andrea Cannata, Dipartimento di Fisica e Geologia, Università di Perugia,
andrea.cannata@unipg.it<mailto:andrea.cannata@unipg.it>
Flavio Cannavò, Osservatorio Etneo, INGV,
flavio.cannavo@ingv.it<mailto:flavio.cannavo@ingv.it>
Raphaël De Plaen, Faculté des Sciences, Université du Luxembourg,
raphael.deplaen(a)gmail.com
Anne Obermann, ETH, anne.obermann@sed.ethz.ch<mailto:anne.obermann@sed.ethz.ch>
Session description: S28 - Applications and developments in ambient noise seismology
In the absence of earthquakes and other strong seismic signals, the Earth surface is not
static but constantly vibrating due to many continuous noise sources such as ocean waves,
storms and anthropic activities, generating the so-called ambient seismic noise. Ambient
seismic noise has proven to be a valuable tool for imaging the earth at different scales
via surface and body wave tomographies. The continuity and reproducibility of ambient
noise correlations, make them an excellent candidate for the monitoring of crustal
properties, which has found applications ranging from volcano monitoring, dynamic recovery
processes of earthquakes to civil engineering. The energy source for most applications is
the microseism. The microseism sources are closely related to ocean wave energy coupling
with the Earth's motion and have today broad applications, among which the
investigation on atmosphere-hydrosphere-cryosphere-solid earth interactions, to make also
inferences on climate changes. In this session, we welcome contributions focused on
ambient noise seismology. We invite contributions concerning multi-scale applications of
seismic noise interferometry, such as imaging structure and monitoring subsurface changes.
We are also enthusiastic to receive studies on the sources of ambient seismic noise (i.e.
microseisms, hum, microbaroms), their generation processes, and their applications on the
investigation of atmosphere-hydrosphere-cryosphere-solid earth interactions. This extends
also to methodological and more theoretical approaches (i.e. role of scattering,
alternative processing techniques).