Spatio-temporal scanning and statistical test of the accelerating moment release (AMR) model using Australian earthquake data


Autoria(s): Wang, Y. C.; Yin, C.; Mora, P.; Yin, X. C.; Peng, K. Y.
Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

The Accelerating Moment Release (AMR) preceding earthquakes with magnitude above 5 in Australia that occurred during the last 20 years was analyzed to test the Critical Point Hypothesis. Twelve earthquakes in the catalog were chosen based on a criterion for the number of nearby events. Results show that seven sequences with numerous events recorded leading up to the main earthquake exhibited accelerating moment release. Two occurred near in time and space to other earthquakes preceded by AM R. The remaining three sequences had very few events in the catalog so the lack of AMR detected in the analysis may be related to catalog incompleteness. Spatio-temporal scanning of AMR parameters shows that 80% of the areas in which AMR occurred experienced large events. In areas of similar background seismicity with no large events, 10 out of 12 cases exhibit no AMR, and two others are false alarms where AMR was observed but no large event followed. The relationship between AMR and Load-Unload Response Ratio (LURR) was studied. Both methods predict similar critical region sizes, however, the critical point time using AMR is slightly earlier than the time of the critical point LURR anomaly.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:74311

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Birkhauser Verlag

Palavras-Chave #Geochemistry & Geophysics #Critical Point Hypothesis #Accelerating Moment Release (amr) Model #Earthquake Prediction #Load-unload Response Ratio (lurr) #Australia Earthquakes #Self-organized Criticality #Unload Response Ratio #Seismic Activity #Lurr Theory #Prediction #Region #Deformation #California #Area #C1 #260206 Earthquake Seismology #780104 Earth sciences
Tipo

Journal Article