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The tsunami that devastated Japan on March 11 was picked up by high-frequency radar in California and Japan as it swept toward their coasts, according to U.S. and Japanese scientists.
The tsunami that devastated Japan on March 11 was picked up by high-frequency radar in California and Japan as it swept toward their coasts, according to U.S. and Japanese scientists. This is the ...
The tsunami that devastated Japan on March 11 was picked up by high-frequency radar in California and Japan as it swept toward their coasts, according to US and Japanese scientists. This is the ...
A high-frequency radar station at Bodega Bay is part of a California coastal network that was able to detect the tsunami in March as it approached from Japan, the first such use of radar technology.
Scientists in California got an early look at the tsunami generated by the massive earthquake in Japan as it rippled across the Pacific Ocean. IE 11 is not supported.
The Japan tsunami was detected by radar in Japan and California, the first time a tsunami has been detected by radar. The study teams hopes their work could lead to new early warning systems.
A high-frequency radar station at Bodega Bay is part of a California coastal network that was able to detect the tsunami in March as it approached from Japan, the first such use of radar technology.
Scientists in California got an early look at the tsunami generated by the massive earthquake in Japan as it rippled across the Pacific Ocean. The March 11 Japan tsunami was picked up by ...
A huge tsunami was spotted in the South China Sea barreling toward Hong Kong in 2003. The vast wave was 10 times the size of the Boxing Day Indian Ocean Tsunami the following year that killed at le… ...
Mitsubishi Electric Corporation announced today that the company has developed an artificial intelligence technology that uses data on a tsunami’ s velocity detected by radar to forecast water ...
Scientists in California got an early look at the tsunami generated by the massive earthquake in Japan as it rippled across the Pacific Ocean. IE 11 is not supported.