These final
two deep-ocean assessment
and reporting of tsunami
(DART) stations, deployed off the Solomon Islands, will give NOAA
forecasters real-time data about tsunamis that could potentially impact
the U.S. Pacific coast, Hawaii and U.S. Pacific territories. Tsunami
sensors are now positioned between Hawaii and every seismic zone that
could generate a tsunami that would impact the state and beyond,
including the U.S. West Coast. Buoys already in the western Atlantic,
Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean have been keeping watch over the U.S East
and Gulf coasts.“Completing the U.S. Tsunami Warning
System is truly a monumental
triumph that includes the advancement of the science, the development
and testing of cutting edge technology, and the large scale project
management skills that brought it all together on a global scale,” said
retired Navy Vice Adm. Conrad C. Lautenbacher, Ph.D., undersecretary of
commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator. “As a young
scientist who researched tsunamis and built early models of their
effects, I never imagined that we could come so far in our ability to
understand, to detect, to model and to warn on such a scale as we have
just achieved.”
DART stations consist of a bottom pressure sensor anchored to the seafloor and a companion moored surface buoy. An acoustic link transmits data from the bottom pressure sensor to the surface buoy, and then satellite links relay the data to NOAA tsunami warning centers. The DART network serves as the cornerstone to the U.S. tsunami warning system.
Other components of the tsunami warning system include NOAA’s tsunami warning centers, a network of tide and seismic stations, forecast models for at-risk communities, and TsunamiReady™, a public preparedness and education program.
Since the Indonesian tsunami of December 2004, NOAA has made significant upgrades to the U.S. tsunami warning system, including:
NOAA encourages state and local communities to improve their resiliency to tsunamis by participating in the TsunamiReady program. This program serves to educate the public about the threat of a tsunami and ensure people know what to do when NOAA issues a tsunami warning. Through active research, NOAA is working to detect tsunamis and issue warnings more rapidly. These efforts will enhance NOAA’s ability to protect the American people from the potentially devastating hazard of a U.S.-bound tsunami.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/03/080311090733.htm