The more people use the app, the better the system will work. The goal is to create a global seismic network — a collective seismograph if you will — that will eventually warn users ahead of time of incoming jolts from far-away quakes.
“For many earthquake-prone developing countries such as Nepal or Peru, MyShake could warn potentially affected persons valuable seconds earlier and, ideally, safe lives,” Deutsche Telekom said in a statement Monday. “These countries currently have either only a sparse ground-based seismic network or early warning system, or none at all — but do have millions of smartphone users.”
While a phone’s motion sensor, or accelerometer, is less sensitive than an in-ground sensometer, it can record earthquakes above a magnitude of 5 within 10 kilometers (6.2 miles). And the sheer number of potential users makes up for a phone’s insensitivity, with an estimated 16 million smartphones in California and about 1 billion worldwide. MyShake can be downloaded for free from Google’s Play store, and an iPhone app is also planned, Deutsche Telekom said.
© 2016 Bloomberg L.P.
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