Building Infrasound Station 55 in Windless Blight, Antarctica
      
            During          the last Antarctic summer, a team of the University of Alaska built the          first infrasound station for the CTBTO Preparatory Commission in Antarctica.          IS 55 is part of the International Monitoring System (IMS), which comprises          a global network of 321 stations, designed to detect any form of nuclear          explosion in any environment. Altogether, 13 IMS stations will be located          in Antarctica. Five of them existed previously as part of scientific networks          and will need significant upgrading; the remaining have to be built from          scratch. Located in a harsh environment with extreme weather conditions          - persistently high wind speeds, severe snow drifts and extreme seasonal          temperature differences (-40 Celsius to +30 Celsius!!) - access to the          stations is in many cases confined to the local summer season only (December          - March).
      
        IS          55 is using very sensitive microbarometers to detect low frequency sound          waves from atmospheric explosions. For its eight sensors, set 1-3 km apart,          to be able to detect an atmospheric explosion, the arrays are sited to          avoid high winds. IS 55 is the only known site on earth with essentially          no winds. The station is equipped with a high quality power supply unit          to ensure continuous operations. Currently data is being transmitted from          Antarctica on the scientific communications network to the University          of Alaska. In a few months, a link will be established with the International          Data Centre (IDC) in Vienna. During the installation period, the local          research base staff has been trained in operating the station.
IS 55, which constitutes an important step in the build          up of the IMS, is expected to be certified during the next Antarctic summer.
      
        15 Apr 2008