
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Scientists at the National Physical Laboratory have released research that utilises existing subsea telecommunications cables as environmental sensors, for example to detect earthquakes. These cables exist in many parts of the world already, so this finding has the potential to revolutionise seafloor earthquake monitoring. Research scientist Giuseppe Marra explains how it all works and Laura Kong, the director of the International Tsunami Information Centre, tells Gareth how this could improve tsunami warning systems.
Healthcare delivery drones in India
AI translating African Bantu languages
Presenter: Gareth Mitchell
Producer: Florian Bohr
(Photo: Underwater fibre-optic cable on ocean floor. Credit: imaginima/Getty Images)
By BBC World Service4.6
105105 ratings
Scientists at the National Physical Laboratory have released research that utilises existing subsea telecommunications cables as environmental sensors, for example to detect earthquakes. These cables exist in many parts of the world already, so this finding has the potential to revolutionise seafloor earthquake monitoring. Research scientist Giuseppe Marra explains how it all works and Laura Kong, the director of the International Tsunami Information Centre, tells Gareth how this could improve tsunami warning systems.
Healthcare delivery drones in India
AI translating African Bantu languages
Presenter: Gareth Mitchell
Producer: Florian Bohr
(Photo: Underwater fibre-optic cable on ocean floor. Credit: imaginima/Getty Images)

7,761 Listeners

4,176 Listeners

527 Listeners

1,058 Listeners

5,516 Listeners

1,790 Listeners

1,848 Listeners

1,078 Listeners

2,117 Listeners

1,962 Listeners

56 Listeners

363 Listeners

138 Listeners

112,937 Listeners

4,166 Listeners

3,213 Listeners

39 Listeners