The GPS network
detected the slow slip events occurring on the Hikurangi subduction zone plate boundary in the weeks and months following the Kaik?ura earthquake.
A GPS network operated by GeoNet, a partnership between GNS Science and the New Zealand Earthquake Commission,
detected slow slip events hundreds of miles away beneath the North Island.
It borrows the financial industry's relative strength index, a measure of how quickly a stock's price is changing, to
detect slow slips within a string of GPS observations.
Not exact matches
A new University of Washington study finds that the same technique can be used to
detect gradual movement of tectonic plates, what are called «
slow slip» earthquakes.
It works the same way as a slippy diff, but is managed by electrics rather than mechanics,
slowing a wheel if
slip is
detected and able to apportion up to 100 per cent of torque to either side.