Seismograph.
seismograph♥
A seismograph is used to record shaking or vibrations in the Earth's crust. It consists of a sensitive instrument that detects ground motion caused by seismic waves during an earthquake. The information recorded by a seismograph helps scientists determine the location, intensity, and duration of an earthquake.
seismograph scale
It was 2004 when a earthquake struck in the middle of theIndian ocean it's measurement is 9.8 critical scale biggest ever in centeries.
"Seismic" refers to an earthquake, so seismic shaking is the shaking motion of the earth (and things on it) caused by an earthquake. There are different waves that emanate from the hypocenter, or point of origin.
There is an earthquake
The amount of shaking produced by an earthquake at a given location is called the intensity. It is measured on the Modified Mercalli Intensity (MMI) scale, which quantifies the level of shaking experienced by people and structures during an earthquake.
i depends where the earthquake is.
Yes, shaking is a primary characteristic of earthquakes
Scientists measure the magnitude (energy) of an earthquake using a seismograph (sort of sensitive pendulum that records the shaking of the earth).
A seismograph is the instrument used to record earthquake waves. It consists of a vibrating mass attached to a fixed base, which moves during ground shaking and produces a record of the seismic waves on a rotating drum or digital display.
The most violent shaking during an earthquake typically occurs closest to the earthquake's epicenter, where the seismic waves are strongest. As you move further away from the epicenter, the shaking intensity decreases.