Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
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Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; February 1996; v. 86; no. 1A; p. 255-258
© 1996 Seismological Society of America
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Continuous monitoring of seismic energy release associated with the 1994 Northridge earthquake and the 1992 Landers earthquake

Sharon Kedar and Hiroo Kanamori

Seismological Laboratory 252-21 California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California 91125

Abstract

We have developed a method to detect long-period precursors for large earthquakes observed in southern California, if they occur. The method allows us to continuously monitor seismic energy radiation over a wide frequency band to investigate slow deformation in the crust (e.g., slow earthquakes), especially before large earthquakes. We used the long-period records (1 sample/sec) from TERRAscope, a broadband seismic network in southern California. The method consists of dividing the record into a series of overlapping 30-min-long windows, computing the spectra over a frequency band of 0.00055 to 0.1 Hz, and plotting them in the form of a time-frequency diagram called spectrogram. This procedure is repeated daily over a day-long record. We have analyzed the 17 January 1994 Northridge earthquake (Mw = 6.7), and the 28 June 1992 Landers earthquake (Mw = 7.3). No slow precursor with spectral amplitude measured over a duration of 30 min larger than that of a magnitude 3.7 was detected prior to either event. In other words, there was no precursor whose moment was larger than ~0.003% of the mainshock.







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