P-wave
P-waves are a type of elastic wave, called seismic waves in seismology, that can travel through a continuum. If the continuum is made up of gases (as sound waves), solids and liquids, including the Earth. P-waves could be produced by earthquakes and recorded by seismographs. The name P-wave is often said to stand either for primary wave, as it has the highest velocity and is therefore the first to be recorded; or pressure wave,[1] as it is formed from alternating compressions and rarefactions. In isotropic and homogeneous solids, the mode of propagation of a P-wave is always longitudinal; thus, the particles in the solid have vibrations along or parallel to the travel direction of the wave energy.
Plane P-wave
Velocity
The velocity of P-waves in a homogeneous isotropic medium is given by
where K is the bulk modulus (the modulus of incompressibility), is the shear modulus (modulus of rigidity, sometimes denoted as G and also called the second Lam parameter), is the density of the material through propagates, and parameter. Of these, density shows the least variation, so the velocity is mostly controlled by K and . The elastic moduli P-wave modulus, , is defined so that and thereby which the wave is the first Lam
Representation of the propagation of a P-wave on a 2d grid (empirical shape)
Typical values for P-wave velocity in earthquakes are in the range 5 to 8km/s.[2] The precise speed varies according to the region of the Earth's interior, from less than 6km/s in the Earth's crust to 13km/s through the core.[3]
P-wave
As an earthquake warning
Earthquake advance warning is possible by detecting the non-destructive primary waves that travel more quickly through the Earth's crust than do the destructive secondary and Rayleigh waves, in P-wave shadow zone (from USGS) the same way that lightning flashes reaches our eyes before we hear the thunder during a storm. The amount of advance warning depends on the delay between the arrival of the P-wave and other destructive waves, generally on the order of seconds up to about 6090 seconds for deep, distant, large quakes such as Tokyo would have received before the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami. The effectiveness of advance warning depends on accurate detection of the P-waves and rejection of ground vibrations caused by local activity (such as trucks or construction) otherwise false-positive warnings will result. Technology currently in use known as the QuakeGuard system employs this technique to automate emergency response procedures that protect against loss of life and reduce property damage.[8]
P-wave
References
[1] Milsom, J. (2003). Field Geophysics (http:/ / books. google. com/ ?id=T7CKj8bqVlwC& pg=PA179& dq="P-wave"+ pressure+ wave+ geophysics& cd=3#v=onepage& q=& f=false). The geological field guide series. 25. John Wiley and Sons. p.232. ISBN978-0-470-84347-5. . Retrieved 2010-02-25. [2] "Speed of Sound through the Earth" (http:/ / hypertextbook. com/ facts/ 2001/ PamelaSpiegel. shtml). Hypertextbook.com. . Retrieved 2011-12-14. [3] "Seismographs - Keeping Track of Earthquakes" (http:/ / earthquake. usgs. gov/ learn/ topics/ seismology/ keeping_track. php). Earthquake.usgs.gov. 2009-10-27. . Retrieved 2011-12-14. [4] GR Helffrich & BJ Wood (2002). "The Earth's Mantle" (http:/ / www. phys. uu. nl/ ~sommer/ master/ Structure and Evolution/ articles for presentation/ 9. pdf). Nature (Macmillan Magazines) 412 (2 August): 501; Figure 1. doi:10.1038/35087500. . [5] Justin L Rubinstein, DR Shelly & WL Ellsworth (2009). "Non-volcanic tremor: A window into the roots of fault zones" (http:/ / books. google. com/ books?id=7AIPPoWf3KIC& pg=PA287). In S. Cloetingh, Jorg Negendank. New Frontiers in Integrated Solid Earth Sciences. Springer. p.287 ff. ISBN90-481-2736-X. . "The analysis of seismic waves provides a direct high-resolution means for studying the internal structure of the Earth..." [6] CMR Fowler (2005). "4.1 Waves through the Earth" (http:/ / books. google. com/ books?id=PifkAotvTroC& pg=PA100). The solid earth: an introduction to global geophysics (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. p.100. ISBN0-521-58409-4. . "Seismology is the study of the passage of elastic waves through the Earth. It is arguably the most powerful method available for studying the structure of the interior of the Earth, especially the crust and mantle." [7] Lowrie, William. The Fundamentals of Geophysics. Cambridge University Press, 1997, p. 149. [8] "Earthquake P-wave Pre-Detection and Disaster Mitigation Technology" (http:/ / www. seismicwarning. com/ web/ technology/ waveseparation. php). 1999. .
"Photo Glossary of Earthquakes" (http://earthquake.usgs.gov/learning/glossary.php). U.S. Geological Survey". Retrieved March 8, 2009.
External links
Animation of a P-Wave (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2rYjlVPU9U4) Purdue's catalog of animated illustrations of seismic waves (http://www.eas.purdue.edu/~braile/edumod/ waves/WaveDemo.htm) Animations illustrating simple wave propagation concepts by Jeffrey S. Barker (http://bingweb.binghamton. edu/~jbarker/animations.html) Detection of P-waves and Rejection of Environmental Noise for Accurate Earthquake Early Warning (http:// www.seismicwarning.com/web/technology/waveseparation.php)
License
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