A RECORDING SIX‐TRACE CATHODE‐RAY OSCILLOGRAPH

Geophysics ◽  
1947 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 424-431
Author(s):  
Ward Shepard, ◽  
G. L. Beyer,

A portable, general purpose six‐trace cathode‐ray oscillograph is described. Eight 2-inch cathode‐ray tubes are arranged side by side in a line. Six of these tubes have individual d.-c. amplifiers with high gain, high input impedance, good high‐frequency response, and excellent stability. The two outside cathode‐ray tubes provide calibrated timing pulses. A removal camera with a fast lens photographs the cathode‐ray tubes on 35-mm. film, to give a continuous displacement‐time record of the cathode‐ray spots. The film may be driven past the lens aperture at speeds continuously variable from a few inches per second to 13 feet per second. A 100-foot film supply system can be used, or a 10-inch strip can be fastened around the drive drum for short records. Film can be processed rapidly, and readily examined with a viewer having a 5 to 10 diameter magnification. More complete analysis of records can be made from enlargements.

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas A. Bishop ◽  
Mohammod Ali ◽  
Jason Miller ◽  
David L. Zeppettella ◽  
William Baron ◽  
...  

IEEE Access ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 23786-23794
Author(s):  
Abhishek Kar ◽  
Mitiko Miura-Mattausch ◽  
Mainak Sengupta ◽  
Dondee Navaroo ◽  
Hideyuki Kikuchihara ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 98 (6) ◽  
pp. 3197-3205 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aizhen Yang ◽  
Timothy E. Hullar

The relationship between semicircular canal radius of curvature and afferent sensitivity has not been experimentally determined. We characterized mouse semicircular canal afferent responses to sinusoidal head rotations to facilitate interspecies and intraspecies comparisons of canal size to sensitivity. The interspecies experiment compared the horizontal canal afferent responses among animals ranging in size from mouse to rhesus monkey. The intraspecies experiment compared afferent responses from the larger anterior canal to those from the smaller horizontal canal of mice. The responses of mouse vestibular-nerve afferents showed a low- and high-frequency phase lead and high-frequency gain enhancement. Regular horizontal-canal afferents showed a sensitivity to 0.5-Hz sinusoidal rotations of 0.10 ± 0.03 (SD) spike · s−1/deg · s−1 and high-gain irregular afferents showed a sensitivity of 0.25 ± 0.11 spike · s−1/deg · s−1. The interspecies comparison showed that the sensitivity of regular afferents was related to the radius of curvature R according to the formula Gr = 0.23R − 0.09 ( r2 = 0.86) and the sensitivity of irregular afferents was related to radius according to the formula Gi = 0.32R + 0.01 ( r2 = 0.67). The intraspecies comparison showed that regularly firing anterior canal afferents were significantly more sensitive than those from the relatively smaller horizontal canal, with Gr = 0.25R. This suggests that canal radius of curvature is closely related to afferent sensitivity both among and within species. If the relationship in humans is similar to that demonstrated here, the sensitivity of their regular vestibular-nerve afferents to 0.5-Hz rotations is likely to be about 0.67 spike · s−1/deg · s−1 and of their high-gain irregular afferents about 1.06 spikes · s−1/deg · s−1.


1992 ◽  
Vol 7 (10) ◽  
pp. 773-778
Author(s):  
S. Narumi ◽  
S. Sudo ◽  
M. Aihara ◽  
H. Fukui

1970 ◽  
Vol 60 (5) ◽  
pp. 1669-1699 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leonardo Seeber ◽  
Muawia Barazangi ◽  
Ali Nowroozi

Abstract This paper demonstrates that high-gain, high-frequency portable seismographs operated for short intervals can provide unique data on the details of the current tectonic activity in a very small area. Five high-frequency, high-gain seismographs were operated at 25 sites along the coast of northern California during the summer of 1968. Eighty per cent of 160 microearthquakes located in the Cape Mendocino area occurred at depths between 15 and 35 km in a well-defined, horizontal seismic layer. These depths are significantly greater than those reported for other areas along the San Andreas fault system in California. Many of the earthquakes of the Cape Mendocino area occurred in sequences that have approximately the same magnitude versus length of faulting characteristics as other California earthquakes. Consistent first-motion directions are recorded from microearthquakes located within suitably chosen subdivisions of the active area. Composite fault plane solutions indicate that right-lateral movement prevails on strike-slip faults that radiate from Cape Mendocino northwest toward the Gorda basin. This is evidence that the Gorda basin is undergoing internal deformation. Inland, east of Cape Mendocino, a significant component of thrust faulting prevails for all the composite fault plane solutions. Thrusting is predominant in the fault plane solution of the June 26 1968 earthquake located along the Gorda escarpement. In general, the pattern of slip is consistent with a north-south crustal shortening. The Gorda escarpment, the Mattole River Valley, and the 1906 fault break northwest of Shelter Cove define a sharp bend that forms a possible connection between the Mendocino escarpment and the San Andreas fault. The distribution of hypocenters, relative travel times of P waves, and focal mechanisms strongly indicate that the above three features are surface expressions of an important structural boundary. The sharp bend in this boundary, which is concave toward the southwest, would tend to lock the dextral slip along the San Andreas fault and thus cause the regional north-south compression observed at Cape Mendocino. The above conclusions support the hypothesis that dextral strike-slip motion along the San Andreas fault is currently being taken up by slip along the Mendocino escarpment as well as by slip along northwest trending faults in the Gorda basin.


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