Abstract

The subionospheric data from a Japanese very low frequency/low frequency (VLF/LF) receiving station at Moshiri, Hokkaido, are used to detect the response of the lower ionosphere to the tsunami triggered by the 2011 Tohoku earthquake. Disturbances in the phase and amplitude of VLF signals propagating from the transmitter in Hawaiian Islands are observed during the tsunami wave passage, and these effects in the ionosphere are compared to the in situ sea-level global positioning system (GPS) measurements near Japan. The frequency of the maximum spectral amplitude both for the VLF and GPS data is found to be in the range of periods of 8–50 min, which is likely to correspond to the period of the internal gravity waves generated by the tsunami.

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