Tiltmeter
A tiltmeter is an instrument designed to measure very small changes from the horizontal level, either on the ground or in structures. Tiltmeters are used extensively for monitoring volcanoes, letting us know if the dams are filling, the small movements of potential landslides, the orientation and volume of hydraulic fractures to various influences such as loading and foundation settlement.
Tiltmeters work by measuring small changes in the ground. The very first tiltmeter was a long-length stationary pendulum. These were used in the very first large concrete dams, and are still in use today, amplified with newer technology such as laser reflectors. Although they had been used for applications such as volcano monitoring, the have distinct disadvantages, such as there huge length and sensitivity to air currents. Even in dams, they are slowly being replaced by the modern electronics tiltmeter.
Volcano and earth-movement monitoring use the water tube, a long baseline tiltmeter. This was a simple arrangement of two water pots, connected by long water filled tube. Any change and in tilt would be caused by a difference in fill-mark of one pot compared to the other.
The modern electric tiltmeter, which is slowly replaceing all other forms of tiltmeter, uses a simple bubble-level, as used in the common carpenter level. An arrangement of electrodes senses the exact position of the bubble in the electrolytic solution, to a high degree of precision. Any small changes in the level are recorded using a standard data logger. This is quiet insensitive to temperature, and can be fully compensated, using built-in thermal electronics. A new compensated technology uses MEMS electronics, it is not known if this can eventually displace the common bubble.
The most dramatic application of tiltmeters is in the area of volcanoes eruption prediction. The main volcano in Hawaii had a habit of filing the main chamber with magma, and then discharge to a side vent. These repeated action, with a pattern of swelling of the main chamber, draining of that chamber, and then an eruption of the adjoining vent. Each number at the park of tilt, on the graph is a recorded eruption.
mnm3
Thursday, March 13, 2008
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5 comments:
Thanks for using the word tiltmeter! Haha. Pretty good. DO WORK!!!
RN1
You did a very good job explaining what a tiltmeter is. Also, how is works.(RS2)
you did a excellent job explaining tilmeters. great work!
kb3
you explained really well what a tiltmeter is and how it works.
NICE JOB!
~ss4
good job, I got a pretty clear view on how they work now! np4
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