Freshman Engineering Student Seismometer Design Project
At the Colorado School of Mines (CSM), as part of
the required Engineering Practices Introductory Course Sequence
(EPICS), every 2002-2003 freshman (450 total) is participating in
the design and construction of a seismometer capable of recording
earthquakes at teleseismic distances (thousands of kilometers).
These students are tasked with doing this at a market cost of less
than $150, or more than a factor of two less than any comparable
commercially available seismometer. To begin to grasp design basics,
the students shown above are building and testing simple table-top
seismometers. Consultants for the project are IRIS Education and
Outreach Committee members John Lahr (U.S Geological Survey),and
Tom Boyd,(CSM Department of Geophysics). IRIS is sponsoring this
project with small cash awards for design winners and equipment
loans for use in testing the prototypes being built by students.
Will any of these budding engineers be able to
create such an instrument at so little a cost? We'll have to wait
and see. Maybe one of these students will someday design and build
the next generation of research seismometers!
Contributed by Tom Boyd

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