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Ricera in Sismologia Sperimentale e Computazionale (RISSC-Laboratory), Department of Physics, Univerita di Napoli "Federico II", Naples, Italy
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Sezione di Roma 1, Via di Vigna Murata, 605, 00143 Roma, Italy
* Present address: Seismology and Computational Rock Physics Laboratory, School of Geological Sciences, University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin, Ireland, shane.murphy@ucd.ie.
Online Material: Additional synthetic kinematic catalogs.
Recent studies on seismological data indicate that earthquake magnitude scales with either the dominant period or the peak amplitude in the seismograms first few seconds. At first sight, this may indicate that the earthquakes final size is somehow related to the way rupture starts. One working hypothesis is that strong radiation from the initial phase of rupture is indicative of a triggering asperity releasing a consistent amount of elastic energy, with the potential to drive the fracture to large extents. We tested this concept with a number of numerical simulations, but within the models investigated, scaling was found only for ruptures extending up to about four times the size of the initial asperity; at larger distances the correlation was lost. Alternatively, a careful kinematic analysis of the earthquake source radiation shows that the initial signal recorded at any station does not necessarily correspond to the rupture initiation but may represent an extended portion of the radiating source. Using the concept of isochrones, we show that the apparent scaling may be explained by a simple kinematic model respecting causality, up to a given magnitude threshold where the scaling relation saturates. The saturation level is in agreement with that observed in some, but not all, of the real seismicity catalogs.
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R. M. Allen, P. Gasparini, O. Kamigaichi, and M. Bose The Status of Earthquake Early Warning around the World: An Introductory Overview Seismological Research Letters, September 1, 2009; 80(5): 682 - 693. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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