Editing Emerging technologies, emerging markets – fostering the innovation potential of research infrastructures

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In other fields (e.g. seismological or geodetic instrumentation), measurement technology and instrumentation development is mainly driven by big industry (resource exploration, surveying, construction) or even the military sector. Thus high sensitivity seismic recording instrumentation development was mainly pushed in the 1950s to 1970s by nuclear explosion monitoring needs, while implementation and installation of satellite-based positioning systems (such as GPS) was funded by military to cover their precision navigation needs. For academic use, specific adaptations may then be required, sometimes leading to niche markets with a small number of specialized companies (usually SMEs, but sometimes merged into larger industrial companies or holdings). Important companies in seismological instrumentation in Europe are e.g. Streckeisen of Switzerland (no web presence, sales through Kinemetrics), Guralp<ref>https://www.guralp.com/</ref> and EarthData<ref>https:// www.earthdata.co.uk/</ref>of the UK, or Lennartz of Germany<ref>https://www.lennartz-electronic.de/</ref>, while global market leaders are located in the U.S. and Canada (Kinemetrics<ref>https://www.kinemetrics.com/</ref>,Nanometrics<ref>https://www.nano-metrics.com/</ref>, RefTek<ref>https://www.reftek.com/</ref>). For geodetic (GNSS) instruments the main providers globally are Leica<ref>https://leica-geosystems.com/</ref> and Trimble<ref>https://geospatial.trimble.com/</ref>. UNAVCO maintains a website listing GNSS receivers and their providers in use by them<ref>https://kb.unavco.org/kb/article/unavco-resources-gnss-receivers-434.html/</ref>.
 
In other fields (e.g. seismological or geodetic instrumentation), measurement technology and instrumentation development is mainly driven by big industry (resource exploration, surveying, construction) or even the military sector. Thus high sensitivity seismic recording instrumentation development was mainly pushed in the 1950s to 1970s by nuclear explosion monitoring needs, while implementation and installation of satellite-based positioning systems (such as GPS) was funded by military to cover their precision navigation needs. For academic use, specific adaptations may then be required, sometimes leading to niche markets with a small number of specialized companies (usually SMEs, but sometimes merged into larger industrial companies or holdings). Important companies in seismological instrumentation in Europe are e.g. Streckeisen of Switzerland (no web presence, sales through Kinemetrics), Guralp<ref>https://www.guralp.com/</ref> and EarthData<ref>https:// www.earthdata.co.uk/</ref>of the UK, or Lennartz of Germany<ref>https://www.lennartz-electronic.de/</ref>, while global market leaders are located in the U.S. and Canada (Kinemetrics<ref>https://www.kinemetrics.com/</ref>,Nanometrics<ref>https://www.nano-metrics.com/</ref>, RefTek<ref>https://www.reftek.com/</ref>). For geodetic (GNSS) instruments the main providers globally are Leica<ref>https://leica-geosystems.com/</ref> and Trimble<ref>https://geospatial.trimble.com/</ref>. UNAVCO maintains a website listing GNSS receivers and their providers in use by them<ref>https://kb.unavco.org/kb/article/unavco-resources-gnss-receivers-434.html/</ref>.
  
Cefalo et al. (2018) present a selection of papers from a 2016 workshop on New Advanced GNSS and 3D Spatial Techniques - Applications to Civil and Environmental Engineering, Geophysics, Architecture, Archaeology and Cultural Heritage<ref>https://gnss.dia.units.it</ref> that comprehensively describe current scientific and corresponding instrumentation challenges in the field.
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Cefalo et al. (2018) present a selection of papers from a 2016 workshop on New Advanced GNSS and 3D Spatial Techniques - Applications to Civil and Environmental Engineering, Geophysics, Architecture, Archaeology and Cultural Heritage<ref>https://gnss.dia.units.it</ ref> that comprehensively describe current scientific and corresponding instrumentation challenges in the field.
  
 
Probably the largest markets (in terms of economic volume) in solid Earth sciences are seismological and geodetic (GNSS) instrumentation (including not only sensors but also data loggers / digitizers), where the academic sector and the relevant governmental agencies create a demand of hundreds to (tens of) thousands units of instruments.  
 
Probably the largest markets (in terms of economic volume) in solid Earth sciences are seismological and geodetic (GNSS) instrumentation (including not only sensors but also data loggers / digitizers), where the academic sector and the relevant governmental agencies create a demand of hundreds to (tens of) thousands units of instruments.  

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