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The hypocenter or hypocentre (literally: 'below the center' from the Greek υπόκεντρον), may refer to the site of an earthquake or to that of a nuclear explosion. In the former, it is a synonym of the focus; in the latter of ground zero.
Earthquakes
In connection with an earthquake, strictly speaking, the term hypocenter is redundant. It is the same as the earthquake's centre or focus. That is the location inside the Earth's crust where the earthquake originates; however, the term is used to mean the point at which the earthquake originated. It is directly below the epicenter at a depth known as the focal depth. It is the position where the energy stored in the strain in the rock is released. An earthquake is a natural phenomenon that results from the sudden release of stored energy in the Earths crust that creates seismic waves. ...
Adjectives: Terrestrial, Terran, Telluric, Tellurian, Earthly Atmosphere Surface pressure: 101. ...
The epicenter is directly above the earthquakes focus. ...
This article is about the deformation of materials. ...
The location of an earthquake's hypocenter can be calculated from measurements based on seismic wave phenomena. As with all wave phenomena in physics, there is an uncertainty in such measurements that grows with the wavelength under consideration so the depth of the source of these long-wavelength (low frequency) waves is difficult to determine exactly. . . p-wave and s-wave from seismograph A seismic wave is a wave that travels through the Earth, most often as the result of a tectonic earthquake, sometimes from an explosion. ...
This article is about waves in the most general scientific sense. ...
Physics (Greek: (phúsis), nature and (phusiké), knowledge of nature) is the science concerned with the fundamental laws of the universe. ...
The wavelength is the distance between repeating units of a wave pattern. ...
This is important, because very strong earthquakes radiate a large fraction of their released energy in seismic waves with very long wavelengths. A stronger earthquake involves the release of energy from a larger mass of rock. As with the larger mass of air in a larger organ pipe, it produces a lower 'note'.
Air burst explosions The term hypocenter also refers to the point on the surface of the earth directly below an explosion above the ground, in the atmosphere. In principle, it applies to any such explosion but the term was not found to be necessary until the very large explosions of nuclear bombs became a reality. In this context, the term 'ground zero' was synonymous with hypocenter, though the ground zero term has been rendered less precisely useful, as it has been used by journalists and others, ever more loosely. Ground zero is the exact location on the ground where any explosion occurs. ...
See also - Hiroshima Peace Memorial - The closest structure to withstand the 1945 nuclear explosion, it was 150 meters / 490 feet away from the hypocenter.
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