海角大神

Seismic networks can help fight fires. Here's how.

Pairing high-definition cameras with microwave-based earthquake early warning networks can help firefighters pinpoint blazes without wasting resources or risking personnel.

|
AlertTahoe/ NSL
AlertTahoe's fire cameras captured the Washington Fire south of Lake Tahoe, Nevada in 2015.

The same systems used to detect earthquakes in California and Nevada are now being used to help firefighters detect wildfires faster than ever, with the potential to save both dollars and lives.

鈥淭he old style of firefighting is like storming the beach at Normandy,鈥 said Graham Kent, director of the Nevada Seismological Laboratory and seismology professor at the University of Nevada, in a press release.

鈥淚f you can get on a fire early, with special tools,鈥 Prof. Kent continued, 鈥渢hen it becomes more like a Special Forces situation.鈥

Two of Kent鈥檚 homes in California and Nevada have been in danger of, or burned by, wildfires.

Kent, who is speaking聽at聽the Seismological Society of America's 2016 Annual Meeting in Reno, Nevada, this week,聽says that seismic warning systems currently in place across the southwest, if repurposed to allow for the detection of multiple hazards, could serve not only as earthquake monitors but as lookouts for wildfires, floods, thunderstorms, and more.

The seismic detection networks in place in Nevada and eastern California can also be designed to transmit footage captured from high-definition wilderness cameras with the ability to pan, tilt, and zoom. Transmitted via the microwave-based earthquake system, the high-quality images can quickly point first responders toward dangerous situations or weather events without interference or delay from other communication grids during emergencies.

The multifunctional detection systems are already proving successful, Kent says. During last year鈥檚 fire season in Nevada, a platform dubbed AlertTahoe and another like it were responsible for prompt warnings for more than 25 fires. AlertTahoe and the Bureau of Land Management will add 15 to 20 new wildlife cameras to its system in 2016.

Researchers are also currently developing 鈥渕achine vision鈥 for the camera systems that would allow computer programs, rather than people, to watch for images of fire, smoke, and other signals of an emergency, he said.

He added that the cameras can not only aid in disaster alerts, but also save money on earthquake sensors through savings in firefighting by allowing better planning and resource management before any emergency crews or equipment are used.

鈥淚f you build a network that's putting out fires six months out of the year 鈥撀燼 lot of them 鈥撀爐hat essentially pays for the deployment of the entire earthquake early warning network and operation costs for a decade or more in just one fire season,鈥 Kent said.

鈥淔irefighters have to be careful that they don't overrespond on one fire, and then have another larger fire within the hour or so and be positioned in the wrong place,鈥 he added. 鈥淔ire cameras help you understand how bad a fire is, and see how aggressive it is.鈥

The systems could also alert firefighters to blazes caused in the aftermath of earthquakes.

Firefighters and scientists are working to expand the infrastructure from Nevada and California to Idaho and Montana by 2017, to aid in firefighting there.

Footage from the cameras are also available to the public and monitoring agencies, in the form of real-time and time-lapse images.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Seismic networks can help fight fires. Here's how.
Read this article in
/Science/2016/0421/Seismic-networks-can-help-fight-fires.-Here-s-how
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe