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Center for Analysis and Prediction
China Seismological
Bureau
Beijing 100036, People's Republic of
China
chenqf{at}seis.ac.cn
(Q.C.)
International Seismological Centre
Pipers Lane,
Thatcham
Berkshire RG19 4NS, United
Kingdom
ray{at}isc.ac.uk
(Q.C.,
R.J.W.)
To prepare to update location procedures at the International Seismological
Centre (ISC), we conduct a global test of location accuracy using two 3D Earth
models and three 1D models (Jeffreys-Bullens [J-B], Preliminary Reference
Earth Model [PREM], ak135) with initial phase arrival times from different
distance ranges. The 3D models include one spherical harmonic model and one
irregular grid model, representing two important alternative model
parameterizations. Our tests include a worldwide distribution of reference
events from a previous study by Smith and Ekström
(1996) and the ground-truth
database of the prototype International Data Centre. For each test we use
phase arrival times associated with the events in the ISC Bulletin and
recompute hypocenters with the same algorithm used in the ISC operations. With
teleseismic arrival times alone (
25°), the overall accuracy
of our recomputed hypocenters is similar using either of the 3D models. The
teleseismic hypocenters from 3D models are, on an average, closer to the
reference locations than the hypocenters computed using any of the 1D models;
but the improvement in results using ak135 is small. When we use the irregular
grid model with teleseismic, regional, and local initial arrival times
together and fix to reference depths, the accuracy of the epicenters is
improved over the results with teleseismic times alone. With a 3D model we are
able to invert for depth for a larger fraction of earthquakes, and our newly
computed depths are more tightly clustered in a subduction zone than depths
from the ISC Bulletin, but not as tightly as depths computed by Engdahl et
al. (1998) who used depth
phases as well as direct phases. In a test of all the locatable events from 1
month of the ISC Bulletin the irregular grid model improved residuals and
formal location uncertainties without introducing large systematic changes in
the hypocenters.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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Evaluating the Fit of Alternative Hypocenters to Arrival Times Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, February 1, 2003; 93(1): 519 - 525. |
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