MyShake quake app invites public testing

A new app that turns a smartphone into a mobile seismometer is being rolled out by California scientists.

Known as MyShake, it can sense an earthquake even when the cell device is being carried in a pocket or a bag.

The researchers want users to download the app, in the first instance, to help test and improve its capabilities.

But ultimately the idea is that recruited phones will be part of a network that not only gathers data but also issues alerts.

Destructive ground motions take time to move out from the epicentre of a large tremor, meaning people at more distant locations could receive several seconds' vital warning on their phones.

"Just a few seconds' warning is all you need to 'drop, take cover and hold on'," said Prof Richard Allen from the UC Berkeley Seismological Laboratory.

"Based on what social scientists have told us about past earthquakes, if everyone got under a sturdy table, the estimate is that we could reduce the number of injuries in a quake by 50%," he told BBC News.

Prof Allen has a paper about MyShake in this week's Science Advances journal, but he has also been demonstrating it here in Washington DC at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

The app relies on a sophisticated algorithm to analyse all the different vibrations picked up by a phone's onboard accelerometer.

This algorithm has been "trained" to distinguish between everyday human motions and those specific to an earthquake.

The achieved sensitivity is for a Magnitude 5 event at a distance of 10km (6.2 miles) from the epicentre.

In simulations, the app detects a quake correctly in 93% of cases.

All this is done in the background - much like health apps that monitor the fitness activity of the phone user.

Once triggered, MyShake sends a message to a central server over the mobile network. The hub then calculates the location and size of the quake.

False positives are filtered out because the server is connected to existing seismic and GPS monitoring stations, and - if the public take up MyShake - thousands of other phones.

"We took the data from our traditional network gathered during the 2014 La Habra earthquake near Los Angeles, and downgraded its quality to something similar to what might be recorded on your smartphone, and then we applied the MyShake algorithm blindly to that data," Prof Allen explained.

"The system triggered rapidly and accurately, and that's really given us the confidence to now take MyShake out to the public for its big, real test."

For this release, MyShake is available for Android devices; an iOS version is very likely to come in the future. And to be clear, enrolled phones will not be receiving alerts of earthquakes - not yet.

Newsletter

Introducing 'Fronx' - Maruti Suzuki's sporty C-SUV at Ambal Auto's Nexa showroom in Nava India!

The car is designed with a modern aerodynamic style that is both aesthetically pleasing and sporty. The Fronx C-SUV is p...

Hello iPhone: Following EU, Indian Government to make USB-C charging port mandatory across all smartphones

Earlier this year, Greg Joswiak, Senior Vice President, worldwide marketing at Apple said during The Wall Street Journal...

Covid Vaccine 100% Effective On 12-15-Year-Olds: BioNTech-Pfizer

Covid Vaccine 100% Effective On 12-15-Year-Olds: BioNTech-Pfizer

Telegram introduces group voice chat in a unique way to mimic conference calls

Telegram introduces group voice chat in a unique way to mimic conference calls

Coimbatoreans witnessed The Great Conjunction with a telescopic view

The solar system's two biggest planets - Jupiter and Saturn were in a straight plane yesterdayas part of "The Great Conj...

Astronomy Festival on 21 Dec: Discussion on rare event of alignment of Jupiter and Saturn

Astronomy Festival on the 21st: Discussion on the rare event of alignment of Jupiter and Saturn