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Eavesdropping on the Earth itself by Staff Writers Trondheim, Norway (SPX) Jan 17, 2023
The more-than 1.2 million km of fibre-optic cables that criss-cross the planet carry the world's phone calls, internet signals and data. But this summer, researchers published the eerie sounds of blue and fin whales detected by a fibre-optic cable on the west coast of Svalbard - a first. Now the researchers want to eavesdrop on an even larger beast - the Earth itself. Combining the world's fibre-optic network with existing remote-sensing systems, like satellites, could create a low-cost global real-time monitoring network, said Martin Landro, a professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology's (NTNU) Department of Electronic Systems and head of the Centre for Geophysical Forecasting. "This could be a game-changing global observatory for Ocean-Earth sciences," he said. Landro was lead author for an article about how such a system could work, published in Nature Scientific Reports.
Tiny changes in a fibre the diameter of a hair What has changed, however, are the tools that can be used to extract information from these networks. The tool in question has the rather alarming name of an interrogator. The interrogator can be hooked up to a fibre-optic cable network to send a pulse of light through the cable. Any time a sound wave or an actual wave hits the underwater cable, the fibre flexes, just a little bit. "And we can measure the relative stretch of the fibre extremely precisely," Landro said. "It has been around for a long time, this technology. But it has made a huge step forward in the last past five years. So now we are able to use this to monitor and measure acoustic signals over distances up to 100 to 200 kilometres. So that's the new thing." Landro's team - including researchers from Sikt, the Norwegian Agency for Shared Services in Education and Research, and Alcatel Submarine Networks Norway, AS, which provided the interrogators, used a 120 km long fibre-optic cable between Longyearbyen, the largest settlement in Svalbard, and Ny-Alesund, a research outpost on the southwest coast of the largest island in the archipelago. They monitored the cable for 44 days in 2020, and tallied up more than 800 whale vocalizations. You can read about those results here. "The fibre cable between Longyearbyen and Ny-Alesund, which was put in production in 2015 after 5 years of planning and prework, and mainly funded by our ministry, was intended to serve the research community and the geodetic station in Ny Alesund with high and resilient communication capacity," Olaf Schjelderup, head of Sikt's national R&E network, said in an earlier article about the monitoring project. Schjelderup was also a co-author on the new paper. "The DAS sensing and whale observation experiment shows a completely new use of this kind of fibre optic infrastructure, resulting in excellent, unique science," he said. The technology is good, but range continues to be a limitation. The hope is it will get even better as the technology improves, Landro said. "Although current interrogators are not yet able to sense beyond the repeaters typically used in long fibre-optic cables, the technology is developing very quickly and we expect to be able to overcome these limitations soon," Landro said.
Ships, earthquakes, and a strange pattern of waves The measurements were precise enough that they could correlate their measurements with each exact event that had happened - including a big earthquake in Alaska, Landro said. "We saw a lot of ship traffic, of course, and a lot of earthquakes, the biggest of which was from Alaska," he said. "That was a big one - we saw it on every channel (in the cable) for all 120 km. And we also saw that we could detect distant storms." One example of how the system was able to detect ships involved the Norbjorn, a general cargo ship that was detected crossing the fibre-optic cable about 86.5 km from Longyearbyen. The researchers were able to estimate the ship's speed from its track across the cable, and then could verify it with the ship's Automatic Identification System (AIS) track.
A key publication from 1963 "These are the physical ocean waves that travel on the sea surface," Landro said. The lowest frequency waves travel the fastest, followed by higher frequency waves that arrive as much as 6 days later. It's a pattern that was recognized in 1963, when the oceanographer Walter Munk published a paper describing how scientists could figure out where the waves generated by storms were coming from, by measuring the slope of the frequency-time plot of the waves and doing some calculations. Using these calculations, Landro's team identified Tropical Storm Eduardo, which was 4100 km from Svalbard in the Gulf of Mexico. They also identified a big storm off of Brazil, 13,000 km away from the Svalbard cable.
More information on earthquakes However, seismometers are expensive, and they aren't nearly as widely distributed as the world's fibre-optic cable network. The one drawback with the fibre-optic network is that it has a lower signal-to-noise ratio. That means there's a lot of background noise, and the signal - from the earthquake - isn't as clear or strong against the background noise. But the advantage of the fibre network is that it is widespread, and already in place, which means it could provide additional information to existing seismometers. The idea wouldn't be to replace the existing system, but to complement it. "The question then is, what can we learn from a method that has lower signal-to-noise ratio, but has better spatial coverage? How could we use that extra information, even though it is lower quality, to learn more about the earthquake and its properties?," Landro said.
Monitoring pipelines for potential sabotage "Can we use this fibre-optic technology to monitor and protect infrastructure on the seabed? That's an important question," he said. The challenge with pipelines is that they make noise, as gas flows through the pipe. "With the background noise, we have to characterize the natural variability. And then if you have something coming close to that pipeline, what is the threshold? When do you act, what can you detect? And we don't know," he said. "So the plan is to conduct dedicated tests on this." Eventually, the idea could be to have real-time monitoring of pipelines to make sure they are safe. Already, researchers have a real-time stream of acoustic data from the Svalbard fibre network.
Research Report:Sensing whales, storms, ships and earthquakes using an Arctic fibre optic cable
Ericsson books $220 million for US fines on Iraq claims Stockholm (AFP) Jan 12, 2023 Ericsson said Thursday it had earmarked $220 million to cover potential US fines over suspected bribes to the Islamic State group in Iraq, a case that has weighed over the Swedish telecoms group for months. The company acknowledged in February that some employees may have bribed IS members for road transport through areas controlled by the jihadists in Iraq between 2011 and 2019. The US Department of Justice is investigating if Ericsson violated its Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), which ca ... read more
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