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The First Data of the Autonomous BBOBS-NX (NX-2G) for New Era of Ocean Bottom Broadband Seismology
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  • Hajime Shiobara,
  • aki ito,
  • Hiroko Sugioka,
  • Masanao SHINOHARA
Hajime Shiobara
The University of Tokyo

Corresponding Author:shio@eri.u-tokyo.ac.jp

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aki ito
JAMSTEC
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Hiroko Sugioka
Kobe University
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Masanao SHINOHARA
The University of Tokyo
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Abstract

The ocean floor broadband seismology has been established based on several practical observations by using broadband ocean bottom seismometer (BBOBS) and its new generation system (BBOBS-NX) in Japan since 1999. The data obtained by our BBOBS and BBOBS-NX is adequate for broadband seismic analyses, especially the BBOBS-NX enables the quality of the horizontal data comparable to land sites in longer periods (10 s –). And, the BBOBS-NX with tilt measurement function, BBOBST-NX, is in practical evaluation for the mobile tilt observation that may realize a dense seafloor geodetic monitoring with low cost. The weak point of the BBOBS-NX system lies in the intrinsic limitation of the submersible in its operation. If this system can be operated alone like as the BBOBS, it should be a true breakthrough of ocean bottom seismology. We call this new autonomous BBOBS-NX as the NX-2G in short. Several problems to realize the NX-2G have been almost cleared through test observations since 2012. The function of the NX-2G system is based on 3 stage operations as shown in the image. The glass float is added to obtain enough buoyancy to extract the sensor unit from the seafloor and also to suppress the oscillating tilt of the system in descending, not to exceed the tilt allowance of the broadband seismic sensor. In Oct. 2016, the first in-situ test of the NX-2G system was performed. The landing of the NX-2G looked well and the maximum tilt in descending was about ±2.5°, that ensured the effective suppression for the oscillating tilt by the glass float. As the final step test of the NX-2G, the one-year-long observation has been started in April 2017 with the BBOBS deployed nearby, to obtain simultaneous data for the noise level evaluation. The free-fall deployment and the transition from the landing stage to the observation stage were completed, those were monitored through the acoustic communication from the ship. This NX-2G was recovered in Oct. 2018 with the ROV, KAIKO Mk-IV, to watch the transition from the observation stage to the recovery stage at the seafloor. All function of the NX-2G at the seafloor was perfect with immediate extraction of the sensor unit. Noise level comparison with the BBOBS shows about 10 dB improvement that is not enough as expected, which may lie in a small tension of the cable between the sensor unit and the recording unit. And, scenes of the landing and the first transition were selfied by the Deep-Sea CAM.