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Broadband vs short period is established convention for the band code for seismometers, but doesn't always make sense for other types of sensors. It would be good to document which of the two sets of band codes is preferred if the notion of broadband isn't meaningful and sample rate is > 10 sps.
I think making the non-broadband band codes; eg S,E,D,G; the preferred might be better, but?
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I would tend to call everything else "broadband" because I assume the types of sensors for which the band codes aren't applicable are "absolute/relative" (humidity, electric test point, temperature, water current...), which is closer to broadband than to short period.
Regards
Wayne
_______________________________
Wayne Crawford
CNRS Researcher
Bureau 341
Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris
1, rue Jussieu
75238 Paris Cedex 05
+33 6 14 42 77 70
On 12 May 2023 at 20:10:28, Philip Crotwell ***@***.***) wrote:
Broadband vs short period is established convention for the band code for seismometers, but doesn't always make sense for other types of sensors. It would be good to document which of the two sets of band codes is preferred if the notion of broadband isn't meaningful and sample rate is > 10 sps.
I think making the non-broadband band codes; eg S,E,D,G; the preferred might be better, but?
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Broadband vs short period is established convention for the band code for seismometers, but doesn't always make sense for other types of sensors. It would be good to document which of the two sets of band codes is preferred if the notion of broadband isn't meaningful and sample rate is > 10 sps.
I think making the non-broadband band codes; eg S,E,D,G; the preferred might be better, but?
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: