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Seismic Waveform Data from Greece and Cyprus: Integration, Archival, and Open Access

Christos Evangelidis, Nikolaos Triantafyllis, Michalis Samios, Kostas Boukouras, Kyriakos Kontakos, Olga‐Joan Ktenidou, Ioannis Fountoulakis, I. Kalogeras, Νikolaos S. Melis, Odysseus Galanis, Costas B. Papazachos, P. M. Hatzidimitriou, E. M. Scordilis, Efthimios Sokos, P.N. Paraskevopoulos, A. Serpetsidaki, George Κaviris, Vasilis Kapetanidis, P. Papadimitriou, Nicholas Voulgaris, I. Kassaras, George Chatzopoulos, Ioannis Makris, Filippos Vallianatos, Kyriaki Kostantinidou, Christos Papaioannou, Nikos Theodoulidis, Basil Margaris, S. Pilidou, Iordanis Dimitriadis, Paris Iosif, Maria Manakou, Zafeiria Roumelioti, Kyriazis Pitilakis, Evi Riga, Giorgos Drakatos, Anastasia Kiratzi, G.‐A. Tselentis

2021Seismological Research Letters46 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract The National Observatory of Athens data center for the European Integrated Data Archive (EIDA@NOA) is the national and regional node that supports International Federation of Digital Seismograph Networks and related webservices for seismic waveform data coming from the southeastern Mediterranean and the Balkans. At present, it serves data from eight permanent broadband and strong-motion networks from Greece and Cyprus, individual stations from the Balkans, temporary networks and aftershock deployments, and earthquake engineering experimental facilities. EIDA@NOA provides open and unlimited access from redundant node end points, intended mainly for research purposes (see Data and Resources). Analysis and quality control of the complete seismic data archive is performed initially by calculating waveform metrics and data availability. Seismic ambient noise metrics are estimated based on power spectral densities, and an assessment of each station’s statistical mode is achieved within each network and across networks. Moreover, the minimum ambient noise level expected for strong-motion installations is defined. Sensor orientation is estimated using surface-wave polarization methods to detect stations with misalignment on particular epochs. A single data center that hosts the complete seismic data archives with their respective metadata from networks covering similar geographical areas allows coordination between network operators and facilitates the adhesion to widely used best practices regarding station installation, data curation, and metadata definition. The overall achievement is harmonization among all contributing networks and a wider usage of all data archives, ultimately strengthening seismological research efforts in the region.

Topics & Concepts

SeismometerMetadataData centerData qualitySeismologyComputer scienceDatabaseGeologyRemote sensingEngineeringWorld Wide WebComputer networkMetric (unit)Operations managementSeismic Waves and AnalysisGeophysics and Sensor Technologyearthquake and tectonic studies
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