Assessment Of Present Electromagnetic Techniques For The Location Of Trapped Miners

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
John Durkin
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The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
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16
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791 KB
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Abstract

Field studies have been conducted in a large number of coal mines throughout the U.S. to determine the effectiveness of electromagnetic techniques in locating men trapped underground following a mine disaster. Data from these tests have been used to generate models of expected signal and noise distributions as found above mines throughout the coal fields. These distributions have aided in placing the expected performance of a through-the-earth electromagnetic communications technique into a probabilistic framework. Results indicate an expected 45% probability of detecting a miner's signal from a depth of 1,000 ft, a depth which exceeds 903 of the coal mines within the U.S. and a 90% probability at a depth of 500 ft, a depth which exceeds 50% of the mines.
Citation

APA: John Durkin  Assessment Of Present Electromagnetic Techniques For The Location Of Trapped Miners

MLA: John Durkin Assessment Of Present Electromagnetic Techniques For The Location Of Trapped Miners. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH),

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