Strainmeter


A strainmeter is an instrument used by geophysicists to measure the
deformation of the Earth.
Linear strainmeters measure the changes in the distance between two points,
using either a solid piece of material
or a laser interferometer.
The type using a solid length standard was invented by Benioff in 1932,
using an iron pipe; later instruments used rods made of fused quartz.
Modern instruments of this type can make measurements of length changes over
very small distances, and are commonly placed in boreholes to measure
small changes in the diameter of the borehole.
Another type of borehole instrument detects changes in a volume filled with
fluid.
The most common type is the dilatometer invented by Sacks and Evertson in the USA
;
a design that uses specially shaped volumes to measure the strain tensor
has been developed by Sakata in Japan.
All these types of strainmeters can measure deformation over frequencies
from a few Hz to periods of days, months, and years. This allows them to measure
signals at lower frequencies than can be detected with seismometers.
Most strainmeter records show signals from the earth tides, and seismic waves
from earthquakes.
At longer periods, they can also record the gradual accumulation of stress
caused by plate tectonics, the release of this stress in earthquakes,
and rapid changes of stress following earthquakes.
The most extensive network of strainmeters is installed in Japan;
it includes mostly quartz-bar instruments in tunnels and borehole strainmeters,
with a few laser instruments.
Starting in 2003 there has been a major effort
to install many more strainmeters along the Pacific/North-America plate boundary
in the United States.
The aim is to install about 100 borehole strainmeters,
primarily in Washington, Oregon and California, and five laser strainmeters,
all in California.