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Monitoring extreme meteo-marine events in the Mediterranean area using the microseism (Medicane Apollo case study)

Alfio Marco Borzì, Vittorio Minio, Flavio Cannavò, Angelo Cavallaro, Sebastiano D’Amico, Adam Gauci, Raphaël De Plaen, Thomas Lecocq, Gabriele Nardone, Arianna Orasi, Marco Picone, Andrea Cannata

2022Scientific Reports27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Microseism is the continuous background seismic signal caused by the interaction between the atmosphere, the hydrosphere and the solid Earth. Several studies have dealt with the relationship between microseisms and the tropical cyclones, but none focused on the small-scale tropical cyclones that occur in the Mediterranean Sea, called Medicanes. In this work, we analysed the Medicane Apollo which impacted the eastern part of Sicily during the period 25 October-5 November 2021 causing heavy rainfall, strong wind gusts and violent sea waves. We investigated the microseism accompanying this extreme Mediterranean weather event, and its relationship with the sea state retrieved from hindcast maps and wave buoys. The spectral and amplitude analyses showed the space-time variation of the microseism amplitude. In addition, we tracked the position of Apollo during the time using two different methods: (i) a grid search method; (ii) an array analysis. We obtained a good match between the real position of Apollo and the location constraint by both methods. This work shows that it is possible to extract information on Medicanes from microseisms for both research and monitoring purposes.

Topics & Concepts

MicroseismGeologySeismologyMediterranean seaMeteorologyClimatologyMediterranean climateGeographyArchaeologySeismic Waves and Analysisearthquake and tectonic studiesTropical and Extratropical Cyclones Research
Monitoring extreme meteo-marine events in the Mediterranean area using the microseism (Medicane Apollo case study) | Litcius