Andrea Mustain, OurAmazingPlanet Staff Writer 
CREDIT: NOAA View full size image
The 8.9-magnitude earthquake that struck Japan earlier today (Mar. 11)  sent a deadly wall of water roaring ashore the country's main island of  Honshu, killing hundreds and washing away cars and buildings in a deadly  tide of debris. The quake, which ruptured  about 80 miles (130 kilometers) from Japan's northeastern coastline,  occurred when one tectonic plate dove violently beneath another, causing  a nearly 300-mile (480-km) swath of the seafloor to lurch upward, generating a tsunami. The devastation in Japan was swift. The monster wave arrived less than  two hours after the quake — the world's fifth-largest on record.  However, an ocean away, calculations were under way to see what the  tsunami would do over the coming hours. Shortly after the temblor, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric  Administration (NOAA) released a comprehensive list of estimated tsunami  heights and arrival times for the North American coast, and watches and  warnings were issued from Alaska to California. Formulating those predictions can be a tricky business. Damage details Uri ten Brink, a research geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey,  said figuring out how fast a tsunami will move is fairly  straightforward. "What is hard to predict is the level of the tsunami generation — the amplitude of the wave," ten Brink told OurAmazingPlanet. A tsunami has two key ingredients that are important for scientists  trying to model how a given wave will behave: amplitude and wavelength. Amplitude is essentially how tall a wave is, from peak to trough. Wavelength is the distance between each peak. Ten Brink said these qualities can be illustrated by simply turning on a  radio. Turn up the volume, and you've just adjusted the sound waves'  amplitude. But changing the volume on your radio doesn't alter the  sound's pitch — its wavelength. If a tsunami's amplitude is very large (loud), it will produce a taller  wave. If a tsunami's wavelength is very long (that would be the same as  a low, deep sound), it will travel far before it loses energy. New models Scientists at federal agencies are using a newly developed  The system, widely adopted just last year, has vastly improved  predictions of a tsunamis' behavior and effects — wavelength and  amplitude among them — and as a result, tsunami warnings  have become far more detailed and accurate, according to Costas  Synolakis, a professor and director of the Tsunami Research Center at  the University of Southern California who, along  with NOAA's Vasily  Titov, developed MOST. MOST models a tsunami from generation to  Even MOST's initial forecasts of tsunami effects, formulated before all  the data from buoys scattered around the Pacific Ocean were  incorporated, were very accurate, Synolakis said. In addition, the model  adjusts itself along the way, changing predictions as conditions and  data change. Although MOST is a huge step forward, Synolakis said, there's always  room for improvement, and researchers need better seismic information,  more data-collecting buoys bobbing across the world's oceans, and the  ability to incorporate  "The ultimate goal is to improve the forecast and make it faster when  the earthquake happens very close to a coast," Synolakis told OurAmazingPlanet, adding that the vast amount of data collected in the  aftermath of the Japan earthquake will prove invaluable to the  scientists trying to improve tsunami models, and perhaps save lives in  the future. "I guess that's a silver lining," he said. This article was provided by OurAmazingPlanet, a sister site to LiveScience.  | 
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