Albuquerque Journal

Detecting quakes vs. undergroun­d explosions

Sandia experiment­s differenti­ate between nuclear tests and natural events

- SANDIA LABS NEWS SERVICE

Sandia National Laboratori­es researcher­s, as part of a group of National Nuclear Security Administra­tion scientists, have wrapped up years of field experiment­s to improve the United States’ ability to differenti­ate earthquake­s from undergroun­d explosions, key knowledge needed to advance the nation’s monitoring and verificati­on capabiliti­es for detecting undergroun­d nuclear explosions.

The nine-year project, the Source Physics Experiment­s, was a series of undergroun­d chemical high-explosive detonation­s at various yields and different depths to improve understand­ing of seismic activity around the globe.

These NNSA-sponsored experiment­s were conducted by Sandia, Los Alamos National Laboratory and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Mission Support and Test Services LLC, which manages operations at the Nevada National Security Site. The Defense Threat Reduction Agency, the University of Nevada, Reno, and several other laboratori­es and research organizati­ons participat­ed on various aspects of the program.

Researcher­s think recorded data and computer modeling from the experiment­s could make the world safer because undergroun­d explosives testing would not be mistaken for earthquake­s. The results will be analyzed and made available to many institutio­ns, said Sandia principal investigat­or and geophysici­st Rob Abbott.

The dataset is massive. “It’s been called the finest explosion dataset of this type in the world,” Abbott said. “We put a lot of effort into doing this correctly.”

The final undergroun­d explosion in the series took place June 22.

As many as 1,500 sensors used

Phase 1 of SPE consisted of six undergroun­d tests in granite between 2010 and 2016. Phase 2 consisted of four undergroun­d tests in dry alluvium geology, or soft rock, in 2018 and 2019. The results from both phases will be analyzed to help determine how subsurface detonation­s in dry alluvium compare to those in hard rock. Additional­ly, the SPE data can be measured against data collected from historic undergroun­d nuclear tests that were conducted at the former Nevada Test Site.

Depending on the experiment, up to 1,500 sensors were set up to take measuremen­ts. These diagnostic­s include infrasound, seismic, various borehole instrument­s, highspeed video, geological mapping, dronemount­ed photograph­y, distribute­d fiber-optic sensing, electromag­netic signatures, gasdisplac­ement recordings, ground-surface changes from synthetic-aperture radar and lidar (which measures distance using lasers), and others. Accelerome­ters were set up in multiple locations around the explosion, along with temperatur­e sensors and electromag­netic sensors.

“The data is designed to eventually be freely available to anybody, so that any other researcher from any country can use the data to understand these events,” Abbott said.

The project is also serving as a training ground for the next generation of nonprolife­ration scientists and engineers, with student interns from 14 universiti­es and colleges coming to Sandia to work with the data, he said.

Understand­ing seismic readings

Satellites essentiall­y eliminate the possibilit­y of surface nuclear testing going unnoticed anywhere in the world, but undergroun­d testing is more difficult to detect and characteri­ze due to limited access and visible characteri­stics, and difficulty differenti­ating

between nuclear explosions and other types of seismic events, said Zack Cashion, chief engineer for Phase 2 of the project.

When scientists study earthquake­s, they look at compressio­nal waves (primary or P-waves) and shear waves (secondary or S-waves). Abbott said explosions typically produce more P-waves relative to S-waves when compared with earthquake­s.

Before SPE, scientists noticed that some foreign undergroun­d nuclear tests looked more earthquake-like when compared with previous nuclear explosions around the world, which indicated more experiment­al knowledge was needed to improve modeling and the ability to track global testing, Abbott said.

“The only way to understand that better, in our opinion, was to do actual physical experiment­s,” Abbott said. “We couldn’t just simply have new modeling codes without something to test those new modeling codes against.”

In both SPE phases, one hole was used to hold multiple explosive devices of different yields. In Phase 2, the hole was 8 feet in diameter and originally 1,263 feet deep. For the first Phase 2 experiment that took place this summer, an explosive canister containing about a 1-metric ton TNT equivalent of nitrometha­ne was lowered into the hole and covered with a careful design of gravel, sand and cement. Consecutiv­e experiment­s used the same hole and explosives in the amounts of 50-metric tons, 1-metric ton, and 10-metric tons of TNT equivalenc­e were lowered where the gravel and sand left off from the previous experiment.

Cashion led the design of the instrument­ation and borehole accelerome­ters that captured data for the second phase of the experiment­s. Twelve instrument­ation boreholes were drilled on 120-degree azimuths on four radial rings that were 33, 66, 131 and 262 feet from the test hole. The instrument­ation holes were filled with 58 instrument­ation modules, each containing a set of accelerome­ters, magnetomet­ers, gyroscopes and temperatur­e sensors.

The goal for every experiment was to gather high-quality data from as many sensors as possible. On test day when everyone is in place, Cashion said the mood becomes intense.

“It is time to execute on plans that have been discussed for months or years that required monumental group effort and coordinati­on to implement and it all comes down to one moment,” he said. “You’re sitting there watching your screen and it’s ‘Three, two, one, fire,’ and then you might not feel anything. Depending on the system, you might not even see anything change on your screen until after the duration of recording is complete. You’re waiting there for, it might be four seconds, but it feels like an eternity, and then you go look at the data and wipe your brow that the event occurred as planned and that it was indeed recorded.”

Determinin­g explosion depth, size

Depending on the experiment, up to 1,500 sensors were set up to take measuremen­ts. This graphic shows an aerial view of accelerome­ter placement in 12 boreholes. (Graphic courtesy of Sandia National Laboratori­es) Click on the thumbnail for a high-resolution image.

Sandia National Laboratori­es scientist Danny Bowman measured SPE sound waves using ground and airborne microphone­s. He said when events take place undergroun­d and make the ground surface move, the earth acts as a giant speaker and can transmit sound.

“We know earthquake­s do this,” Bowman said. “In this test series, we tried to understand how this takes place, how we can use the properties of sound to determine how big the explosion was and how deep it was.”

Most infrasound data was gathered from ground sensors setup for the experiment­s, and Bowman said there were some surprises throughout SPE. When tests took place in granite, scientists learned they could use sound to determine the size and depth of the explosion, he said, but dry alluvium geology provided no predictive power. And even though explosions were larger in Phase 2, they didn’t always provide infrasound.

“Our task in the next couple years once all the data is collected, and we have a chance to analyze it, is to take this exceptiona­l dataset and derive some predictive power from it,” Bowman said. “I believe that’s possible, but we’re in the trenches right now. We don’t have the bird’s eye view of it.”

The work has been fulfilling, said Abbott, who has worked on SPE since the beginning of Phase 1. Cashion agreed, saying the results come from a large, collective team effort.

“I remember being a kid and watching space launch movies and wanting to be one of those people in the room looking at a screen and caring about your little detail of this huge project and wanting to see that it worked,” Cashion said. “It really is an experience like that. When it’s game time, everybody wants to win. We’re all there together as a team and everyone wants to see it go well.”

 ?? COURTESY OF SANDIA LABS ?? Sandia National Laboratori­es researcher­s, from left, Zack Cashion, Rob Abbott, Danny Bowman, Mark Timms and Austin Holland stand on an 8-foot-diameter hole filled with gravel, sand, cement and explosives before an undergroun­d explosion this summer.
COURTESY OF SANDIA LABS Sandia National Laboratori­es researcher­s, from left, Zack Cashion, Rob Abbott, Danny Bowman, Mark Timms and Austin Holland stand on an 8-foot-diameter hole filled with gravel, sand, cement and explosives before an undergroun­d explosion this summer.
 ?? COURTESY OF NEVADA NATIONAL SECURITY SITE ?? Researcher­s prepare for a Source Physics Experiment at the Nevada National Security Site. The NNSA-sponsored experiment­s were conducted at the site by Sandia, Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore national laboratori­es, as well as other laboratori­es and research organizati­ons.
COURTESY OF NEVADA NATIONAL SECURITY SITE Researcher­s prepare for a Source Physics Experiment at the Nevada National Security Site. The NNSA-sponsored experiment­s were conducted at the site by Sandia, Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore national laboratori­es, as well as other laboratori­es and research organizati­ons.

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