L1 - Earthquake Source Seismology + P1 Flashcards

1
Q

What do we want to know about an earthquake when it happens? (4)

A

Location (lat/long)
Depth
Magnitude
Focal mechanism

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2
Q

What sources of information are there for earthquakes? (3)

A

Seismology
Field work
Satellite geodesy

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3
Q

Where does the rupture in an earthquake start? (1)

What is the epicentre? (1)

A

Hypocentre

Surface expression of the hypocentre

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4
Q

How is a rough location of an earthquake found? (2)

A

Use multiple teleseismic stations

Use the difference in p and s arrival times

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5
Q

Why can p and s arrival times not be used for an accurate earthquake location? (2)

A

Assumes velocity isotropy

Velocity anomalies of +/- 10% of V(s) in the Earth

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6
Q

How can the accuracy of epicentre locations be improved? (2)

A

Use relative locations as nearby earthquakes have small distances that give different arrival times
Or have multiple local seismic stations

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7
Q

Define teleseismic distance (1)

A

30-80 degrees

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8
Q

Why are teleseismic distances used? (1)

A

The ray paths through lithospheric and upper mantle material, immediately below the earthquake are very similar

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9
Q

Why is there a trade-off between the time and depth of earthquakes? (1)

A

Event could have been shallow at an early time or deeper at a later time when viewed from teleseismic distances

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10
Q

How can the depth problem broadly be fixed in locating earthquakes? (2)

A

Local recordings

Waveform modelling

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11
Q

Why do local recordings solve the depth problem in locating earthquakes? (2)

A

Ray paths to seismometers are different

Removes trade-off

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12
Q

How can local recordings of earthquakes give very accurate lat/long/depth of earthquakes? (2)

A

If stations positioned X km apart, the depth can be accurately estimated deeper than X km
If the velocity structure is known, depth within 1km or better

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13
Q

How were magnitudes defined in the past? (2)
What problem arose? (1)
Why? (1)

A

Body-wave magnitude using waves with 1s period
Surface-wave magnitude using waves with 20s period
Saturates for bigger events
Only sensitive to one part of the fault plane for large earthquakes

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14
Q

How was the problem of scale saturation solved? (2)

A
Seismic Moment M(0)
Where M(0) = μAu
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15
Q

Why were waves with 1s and 20s periods used to define magnitudes of earthquakes in the past? (1)

A

Filters out the 6s resonant period of oceans

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16
Q

How does waveform modelling work? (1)

A

Filter seismogram to only long-period waves (>=15s)

17
Q

What are the benefits of waveform modelling? (3)

A

Wave λ > EQ fault plane so event looks like a point source to ignore rupture propagation/slip variation
Ignores short λ variations in velocity structure
Better signal-to-noise ratio as ocean resonance is 7s

18
Q

Which waves are used for waveform modelling? (2)

A

p, pP, sP for body waves

s, sS for surface waves

19
Q

What information can the received pulse generated by an earthquake be used to find? (3)

A

Pulse width depends on depth
Pulse shape depends on focal mechanism
Pulse amplitude depends on seismic moment

20
Q

What is a general rule that can be used if a fault breaks the surface? (1)

A

Fault depth ~ 2 x centroid depth

21
Q

What is the difference between the signal generated by an earthquake and a bomb? (2)

A

EQ: pure double-couple solution = compressional + dilatational
Bomb: all compressional

22
Q

What is the source time function? (1)

A

How long it takes the rupture to propagate across the fault plane

23
Q

Why is there a trade-off between time function and depth in waveform modelling? (1)

A

A broad pulse can be matched by a deeper centroid (increases time between direct and reflected pulses) or a longer time function (longer rupture)

24
Q

Why is there a trade off between depth and moment in waveform modelling? (2)

A

Direct and reflected phases generally have opposite polarities for dip-slip faults (phase reversal at the free surface)
Destructive interference at shallow depths and more moment needed to produce the observed amplitude

25
Q

When modelling the waveform of an earthquake with an unknown fault orientation using p waves, why can strike or rake not be constrained well but dip can be?

A

Unknown fault orientation means all stations in the middle of one quadrant
Changing strike and rake likely means the stations will still be in the middle of the quadrant
But changing dip moves the stations towards or away from the nodal plane, which affects amplitude