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Underground nuclear test explosions can be hidden within earthquake signals, study suggests

Underground explosions can mask seismic signals from earthquakes, study finds
Locations of target sources, background seismicity, and NVAR seismic array sensor locations. (a)聽An 饾憵 饾憦 = 1.96 explosion source (Dry Alluvium Geology [DAG]鈥4) (37.115掳, 鈭116.069掳) with origin time 22 June 2019 at 21:06:20 (UTC) (blue star) and an 饾憵 饾憦 = 2.1 , 6 km deep earthquake (36.819掳, 鈭115.993掳) with origin time 23 January 2019 at 16:27:58 (UTC) (red star), superimposed against background seismicity (diamonds and circles) cataloged by the USGS that is within 50聽km of each location, that is recorded during the same month as each source (201906 and 201901, respectively). (b)聽The 11 elements that compose the NVAR array that is deployed 鈭250聽km from the DAG鈥4 explosion. Credit: Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2025). DOI: 10.1785/0120250038

Could the seismic signal of an underground nuclear test explosion be "hidden" by the signal generated by a natural earthquake?

It's possible, according to a new review article in the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America that contradicts the conventional wisdom about "masking."

The new analysis by Joshua Carmichael and colleagues at Los Alamos National Laboratory found that advanced signal detector technology that can identify a 1.7-ton buried explosion with a 97% success rate only has a 37% when from that explosion are hidden within the seismic waveforms of an earthquake that happens within 100 seconds and about 250 kilometers away from the explosion.

The overlapping waveforms of explosion and earthquake "obfuscate the ability of even the most sensitive digital signal detectors we have to identify that explosion," said Carmichael.

The findings could lead experts to reconsider a 2012 report that concluded earthquake signals could not cover up explosion signals. Potential explosion masking by natural seismic signals is a concern for the community of scientists charged with nuclear test monitoring around the globe.

In North Korea, which has held six nuclear tests over the past 20 years, an increase in regional seismic instruments shows that "there's been a lot more low-magnitude seismicity in the vicinity of test sites than we initially realized," Carmichael noted.

The new findings suggest that "background seismicity in regions where there's any sort of seismicity at all is going to measurably and substantially reduce the probability that we can detect signals from an underground explosion at a test site," he added.

The researchers also found that natural signals from earthquake swarms or other repeating seismic events could be similarly hidden by overlapping waveforms. In this case, the masking effect dropped detection from a 92% to a 16% detection rate.

Underground nuclear test explosions can be hidden within earthquake signals, study finds
(a)聽Seismograms that record waveforms sourced by background seismicity within 2400聽s after 7 January 2019 at 06:45:39 (UTC), which triggers our F鈥恉etector at four distinct times (sky-blue stripes). The signal sources match origin times of cataloged events that locate east of Bodie, California. (b)聽The seismograms in panel (a)聽superimposed with unit-scaled, explosion-sourced template waveforms (blue waveforms) (Fig.聽2a) that we inject into the data during a typical correlator operation. (c)聽The superposition of the resulting compound data stream (orange box) shows interference between the earthquake and explosion sourced waveforms at station NV11. Credit: Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2025). DOI: 10.1785/0120250038

"This may mean that we probably underestimate a lot of the low magnitude seismicity that is sourced during a swarm or an aftershock sequence," Carmichael said. "In other words, we could be largely undercounting the number of earthquakes that occur in these swarms or in certain aftershock sequences."

Explosion masking has been difficult to test because there are so few explosions to examine, and very few that contain both explosion and natural seismic signals.

One way to analyze the would be to simulate explosion data, but Carmichael said there are "too many unknowns" with the high-frequency signals of explosions to accurately create the seismograms that represent relatively small-scale explosions measured at a distance.

Instead, he and his colleagues used a technique that draws from data collected on explosions and natural seismicity at the Nevada National Security Site.

The researchers developed a way to scale down the amplitude of the explosion data, "so that it mimics waveforms recorded from smaller explosions," Carmichael said. These explosion data are then "injected" back a set of earthquake signals, to see if sophisticated multi-channel correlation detectors can identify the explosion signal.

The technique creates a dense set of data that allowed the researchers to finally test the assertion that natural seismicity could not mask explosion signals, Carmichael said.

Researchers rely on multiple factors in addition to seismic signals as part of monitoring, looking for other confirmatory evidence such as the presence of certain radionuclides in the atmosphere. It's unlikely that a coinciding would be enough to completely hide an explosion event.

But the new study offers "at least a recipe" on how to calculate the probability of explosion detection from seismic signals, so that this information can used together with other monitoring tools, said Carmichael.

More information: Joshua D. Carmichael et al, The Reduced Detection Rate of Signals That Are Hidden by Earthquakes: Case Studies with Spotlight Detectors That Operate at Seismic Arrays, Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2025).

Citation: Underground nuclear test explosions can be hidden within earthquake signals, study suggests (2025, April 24) retrieved 2 May 2025 from /news/2025-04-underground-nuclear-explosions-hidden-earthquake.html
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