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Broadband Seismometer Workshop at Granlibakken Conference Center, Tahoe City, California

Join us for the Broadband Seismometer Workshop at Granlibakken Conference Center in Tahoe City, California on March 24-26, 2004. Explore IRIS and seismological instrumentation to meet the challenge of modernizing earthquake monitoring. Engage in discussions on new technologies and goals for system design, testing facilities, and educational partnerships. Network with industry experts and agency perspectives. The workshop aims to enhance sensor technology and data acquisition systems. Don't miss this opportunity to contribute to the future of seismic monitoring!

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Broadband Seismometer Workshop at Granlibakken Conference Center, Tahoe City, California

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  1. Welcome! Broadband Seismometer WorkshopGranlibakken Conference CenterTahoe City, CaliforniaMarch 24-26, 2004

  2. Logistics IRIS & seismological instrumentation Goals of the workshop The Challenge! Introduction

  3. Jon Berger, Chair (UCSD) Shane Ingate, co-Chair (IRIS) John Collins (WHOI) Bill Farrell (SAIC) Jim Fowler (IRIS) Pres Herrington (Sandia NL) Bob Hutt (USGS/ASL) Barbara Romanowicz (UCB) Selwyn Sacks (Carnegie) Frank Vernon (UCSD) Erhardt Wielandt (Stuttgart) Workshop Committee Questions?

  4. IRIS

  5. IRIS Membership 1984 26 Founding Members 2003 101 Full Members 2 U.S. Affiliates 43 Foreign Affiliates 3 Educational Affiliates

  6. IRIS Structure

  7. IRIS has the responsibility for providing modern instrumentation resources for the research community. In 1997, the IRIS Executive Committee appointed an Instrumentation Committee to review the aging, vintage mid-80s hardware and to develop a plan for acquisition of next-generation instrumentation where required for all IRIS program activities. IRIS Instrumentation Committee

  8. The Instrumentation Committee should be pan-IRIS Consortium, spanning all four programs. As technology evolves, the Instrumentation Committee should be cognizant of cross-programmatic system requirements, and pursue goals of system design that will satisfy these cross-programmatic needs. The Instrumentation Committee should be proactive, encouraging research and development as appropriate, and seeking new products that could meet current, future, and unexpected needs for sensors, data acquisition systems, communications and data distribution hardware. The Instrumentation Committee should be responsive to specific needs for technical advice, by providing reports and recommendations to the IRIS Coordination Committee and Standing Committees when requested. The Instrumentation Committee should also serve as IRIS liaison to similar bodies for other programs such as ANSS. IRIS Instrumentation Committee Charge

  9. John Collins, Chair (WHOI) Jim Fowler (IRIS) Bob Hutt (USGS/ASL) Selwyn Sacks (Carnegie) Frank Vernon, Vice-Chair (UCSD) IRIS Instrumentation Committee Membership

  10. Requirements, Needs, and Wants New Ideas, Concepts, and Designs Testing and Testing Facilities Academic/Industrial Partnerships Educational Perspectives and Funding Strategies Goals of the Workshop Report to NSF

  11. The Challenge

  12. The Challenge

  13. The Challenge

  14. The Challenge

  15. Broadband Seismometer Workshop Welcome, and good work!

  16. Revised PM Agenda, Wed 24 Mar 13.00 – 14.00 Lunch 14:00 – 14:30 Foreign (France, Japan, Russia,…) programs 14.30 – 15.00 Agency perspective (NSF; DOE; DOD, JPL/NASA) 15.00 – 16.15 Posters, with brief introductions by authors and break 16.15 – 17.00 Roundtable of current technology: Who is doing what? 17.30 – 18.00 Roundtable overview of new technologies and future directions 18.00 – 19.00 Hosted Hospitality Hour 19.00 - 20.30 Dinner

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