Japan Meteorological Agency seismic intensity scale
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The Japan Meteorological Agency seismic intensity scale (震度 shindo) is a measure used in Japan and Taiwan to indicate the strength of earthquakes. Unlike the Richter magnitude scale (which measures the total magnitude of the earthquake, and represents the size of the earthquake with a single number) the JMA scale describes the degree of shaking at a point on the Earth's surface. As a result, the measure of the earthquake varies from place to place, and a given quake may be described as "shindo 4 in Tokyo, shindo 3 in Yokohama, shindo 2 in Shizuoka".
The JMA operates a network of 180 seismographs and 600 seismic intensity meters and provides real-time earthquake reports to the media and on the internet [1].
[edit] JMA scale explanation
The JMA Scale runs from 0 to 7, with 7 being the strongest. Sometimes roman numerals are used, as in the Mercalli Intensity Scale; however this is not the usual practice in Japan. The real-time reports are calculated automatically from measurements of ground acceleration. The JMA reports the shindo based on the ground acceleration.
Magnitude | Japanese Name | Classification | Effects | Peak ground acceleration |
---|---|---|---|---|
7 | 7 | Ruinous earthquake (激震) | In most buildings, wall tiles and windowpanes are damaged and fall. In some cases, reinforced concrete-block walls collapse. | Greater than 4 m/s² |
6+ | 6強 | Violent earthquake (烈震) | In many buildings, wall tiles and windowpanes are damaged and fall. Most un-reinforced concrete-block walls collapse. | 3.15–4.00 m/s² |
6- | 6弱 | Violent earthquake (烈震) | In some buildings, wall tiles and windowpanes are damaged and fall. | 2.50–3.15 m/s² |
5+ | 5強 | Severe earthquake (強震) | In many cases, un-reinforced concrete-block walls collapse and tombstones overturn. Many automobiles stop due to difficulty in driving. Occasionally, poorly installed vending machines fall. | 1.40–2.50 m/s² |
5- | 5弱 | Severe earthquake (強震) | Most people try to escape from danger, some finding it difficult to move. | 0.80–1.40 m/s² |
4 | 4 | Strong earthquake (中震) | Many people are frightened. Some people try to escape from danger. Most sleeping people awake. | 0.25–0.80 m/s² |
3 | 3 | Weak earthquake (弱震) | Felt by most people in the building. Some people are frightened. | 0.08–0.25 m/s² |
2 | 2 | Light earthquake (軽震) | Felt by many people in the building. Some sleeping people awake. | 0.025–0.08 m/s² |
1 | 1 | Slight earthquake (微震) | Felt by only some people in the building. | 0.008–0.025 m/s² |
0 | 0 | Insensible (無感) | Imperceptible to people. | Less than 0.008 m/s² |
[edit] See also
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Modern scales | ||||||||||||||||
Intensity scales | ||||||||||||||||
European Macroseismic Scale (EMS) | INQUA | Medvedev-Sponheuer-Karnik (MSK) | Modified Mercalli (MM) | Shindo | ||||||||||||||||
Magnitude scales | ||||||||||||||||
Local magnitude (Richter scale) | Moment magnitude | ||||||||||||||||
Historical scales | ||||||||||||||||
Mercalli-Cancani-Sieberg (MCS) | Mercalli-Wood-Neuman (MWN) | Omori | Rossi-Forel |