Thread: BSSA Special Edition: Seismoacoustics and Seismoacoustic Data Fusion Submissions Due Nov 01, 2023

Started: 2022-10-12 16:23:03
Last activity: 2022-10-12 16:23:03
On behalf of our guest editor team I would like to draw your attention to an upcoming BSSA Special Section focused on Seismoacoustics and Seismoacoustic Data Fusion. Submissions are due November 01 2022. Please distribute widely and consider submitting.



The Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (BSSA) solicits manuscripts for a Special Section on Seismoacoustics and Seismoacoustic Data Fusion.

Natural (e.g., volcanic activity, earthquakes, mass movements, microbaroms, bolides) and anthropogenic phenomena (e.g., chemical explosions, mining blasts) can release energy as mechanical waves in the ground, ocean and atmosphere. Due to the mechanical coupling between a planet, the ocean and its atmosphere, waves can propagate across these interfaces and carry information about the source and the media they propagated through. A growing body of literature suggests that multi-technology geophysical observations provide unique constraints on the properties of both the sources and media. Leveraging multi-technology datasets is instrumental for the continued success of future planetary missions, nuclear test ban treaty verification and natural hazard monitoring. Progress in our theoretical understanding of mechanical coupling, advancements in coupled-media wave modeling and developments of efficient multi-technology inversion procedures are key to fully exploit geophysical datasets on Earth and beyond.

Possible topics for manuscripts include, but are not limited to:

* signal detection and source or propagation medium parameter estimation using seismoacoustic data;
* advances in forward and inverse modeling of seismoacoustic phenomena at local and regional distances;
* machine learning and/or big data methods applied to large datasets;
* use and development of novel sensor technologies;
* case studies using seismoacoustic data to investigate natural and anthropogenic sources;
* engineering, laboratory, and structural studies;
* multidisciplinary frameworks for real time or near-real time natural hazard monitoring; and
* applications to future planetary missions (e.g., Venus, Mars, Titan).

Guest Editors for the special section are:

* Fransiska K. Dannemann Dugick, Sandia National Laboratories (fkdanne<at>sandia.gov<fkdanne<at>sandia.gov>)
* Jelle Assink, Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (assink<at>knmi.nl<assink<at>knmi.nl>)
* Stephen J. Arrowsmith, Southern Methodist University (sarrowsmith<at>smu.edu<sarrowsmith<at>smu.edu>)
* Jordan W. Bishop, University of Alaska Fairbanks (jwbishop2<at>alaska.edu<jwbishop2<at>alaska.edu>)
* Quentin Brissaud, NORSAR (quentin<at>norsar.no<quentin<at>norsar.no>)
* Alexandra M. Iezzi, University of California Santa Barbara (amiezzi<at>ucsb.edu<amiezzi<at>ucsb.edu>)
* Léo Martire, NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (leo.martire<at>jpl.nasa.gov<leo.martire<at>jpl.nasa.gov>)

Deadline for submissions is 1 November 2022.

View the full announcement on SSA's website.

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