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10/06/2026
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When an earthquake occurs, energy the epicenter is released in the form of mechanical waves propagating through the ground. Among these, the primary wave, or P-wave, is a longitudinal wave that travels at the highest velocity, has a small acceleration amplitude, and does not cause structural damage. In contrast, the secondary wave, or S-wave, is a transverse wave that travels more slowly but has a larger amplitude and destructive frequency. It is the direct cause of railway trackbed deformation or the collapse of railway infrastructure.
As a reThe core philosophy behind GeoSIG’s solution is to maximize the use of the “golden time window” — the difference in arrival time between the P-wave and the S-wave. By configuring a network of highly sensitive accelerometer stations along the railway line, the system detects and analyzes the P-wave as soon as it reaches the site, instantly calculates the level of hazard, and automatically issues intervention commands, such as train slowdown or emergency stop, through the railway radio communication system transmitted via fiber-optic cables.
sult, the train can be forcibly brought to a complete stop or slowed down to a safe speed range before the destructive wave, the S-wave, reaches the track location.
GeoSIG’s overall solution follows a strict layered technical architecture to ensure maximum availability and eliminate processing latency.

Equipment at seismic stations
The system allows two monitoring objectives to be configured simultaneously on the same field equipment infrastructure:
- Normal OP: No threshold is exceeded; the train continues operating at its design speed.
- System Fault: The system issues a hardware fault or connection loss warning for maintenance purposes.
- Minor Alarm: The primary threshold is exceeded; the system automatically issues a slowdown command.
- Major Alarm: The destructive threshold is exceeded; the system automatically issues an emergency STOP command by cutting off power or activating the train’s emergency braking system.

Structural diagram of the earthquake early warning system for high-speed railways
GeoSIG’s systems have been deployed and proven highly reliable in many large-scale high-speed railway projects around the world.


- At each bridge: Four AC-71 sensors, three AC-73 sensors, and GMSplus / GMSplus6 recorders were installed to monitor the structure the mid-span of bridge girders, pier tops, and pier bases to the free-field ground environment.
- At each station: AC-71 and AC-73 sensors were installed at roof level, basement level, and in free-field locations.

Based on the in-depth analysis of GeoSIG’s comprehensive solution and real-world case studies, three core technology lessons can be drawn as strategic guidance for implementing Disaster Prevention Systems (DPS) for future high-speed railway, urban railway, and suburban railway networks in Vietnam, such as the Hanoi–Quang Ninh line or the Ben Thanh–Can Gio suburban line.
First, EEW and SHM should be integrated on a single hardware infrastructure.
Instead of simply installing sensors to detect earthquakes, the system should be designed as a multi-purpose platform, similar to the Honam project in South Korea. Sensors should be distributed both in free-field ground locations along the railway line to capture P-waves for early warning and at critical infrastructure points, such as viaduct girder mid-spans, pier tops, pier bases, flood-prone underground tunnel areas, and depots. This enables automatic assessment of structural geometry deformation immediately after a natural disaster while optimizing infrastructure investment costs.
Second, the train operation intervention decision-making process must be fully automated.
Signals field data acquisition units must be transmitted through a high-speed redundant fiber-optic network with a minimum bandwidth of 10 Gb, combined with next-generation dedicated radio technologies such as FRMCS / 5G-R. The system must automatically calculate event validity through cross-checking logic algorithms to completely eliminate false alarms caused by train-induced vibration. The output signal must be configured for direct connection to the server of the automatic train signaling and control system through standard communication protocols. This enables the system to automatically activate braking, reduce train speed, or bring the train to a complete stop without relying on delayed manual responses dispatchers.
Third, field equipment components must be standardized for harsh operating conditions.
All seismic sensors, anemometers, accumulated rainfall gauges, and periodic flood sensors in underground tunnel areas must meet the strictest industrial standards for weather resistance, wide dynamic range, and broad flat bandwidth. They should be installed inside specialized protective enclosures, such as stainless-steel boxes, to eliminate noise and localized damage, ensuring the integrity of input data for the central system.
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