MyShake: Detecting and characterizing earthquakes with a global smartphone seismic network
Qingkai Kong, Sarina Patel, Asaf Inbal, Richard M Allen

TL;DR
MyShake leverages a global network of smartphones to detect, locate, and analyze earthquakes, demonstrating the potential of citizen science to supplement traditional seismic networks and improve earthquake monitoring worldwide.
Contribution
This paper introduces a novel global smartphone seismic network that detects and characterizes earthquakes, providing preliminary results on its detection and localization capabilities.
Findings
Detected 757 earthquakes in 2 years
Median location error of 2.7 km for 21 events
Estimated earthquake parameters with reasonable accuracy
Abstract
MyShake harnesses private/personal smartphones to build a global seismic network. It uses the accelerometers embedded in all smartphones to record ground motions induced by earthquakes, returning recorded waveforms to a central repository for analysis and research. A demonstration of the power of citizen science, MyShake expanded to 6 continents within days of being launched, and has recorded 757 earthquakes in the first 2 years of operation. The data recorded by MyShake phones has the potential to be used in scientific applications, thereby complementing current seismic networks. In this paper: (1) we report the capabilities of smartphone sensors to detect earthquakes by analyzing the earthquake waveforms collected by MyShake. (2) We determine the maximum epicentral distance at which MyShake phones can detect earthquakes as a function of magnitude. (3) We then determine the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSeismology and Earthquake Studies · Seismic Waves and Analysis · earthquake and tectonic studies
