Earthquake source spectra estimates vary widely for two Ridgecrest aftershocks because of differences in attenuation corrections
Peter M. Shearer, Ian Vandevert, Wenyuan Fan, Rachel E. Abercrombie, Dino Bindi, Giovanna Calderoni, Xiaowei Chen, William L. Ellsworth, Rebecca M. Harrington, Yihe Huang, Trey C. Knudson, Meggy Rossbach, Mariano Supino, Claudio Satriano, Daniel T. Trugman, & Jiewen ZhangSubmitted June 18, 2024, SCEC Contribution #13461
Differences in stress-drop estimates among groups of scientists for the same earthquakes suggest disagreement in the shape of the source spectra that are used to measure corner frequency. A critical step in characterizing source spectra involves applying empirical corrections for site effects and the loss of high-frequency energy that occurs along the source-receiver path. As part of the Ridgecrest stress drop validation study, we compare path-corrected source spectra among different methods for two nearly co-located M3 earthquakes and investigate whether systematic differences in the applied path corrections are affecting corner-frequency estimates. We find substantial disagreements in the path corrections, which are well-approximated with a simple exponential function related to the strong ground motion parameter $\kappa$. These $\kappa$ differences are strongly correlated with corner frequencies estimates for path-corrected spectra, suggesting they are a large source of systematic differences in corner frequency (and inferred stress drop) among the methods, reflecting varying tradeoffs between the source and path contributions to observed spectra. Because each method presumably fits the data it uses sufficiently well, these results indicate the limitations of existing purely empirical techniques to estimating path corrections and the need for new approaches.
Citation
Shearer, P. M., Vandevert, I., Fan, W., Abercrombie, R. E., Bindi, D., Calderoni, G., Chen, X., Ellsworth, W. L., Harrington, R. M., Huang, Y., Knudson, T. C., Rossbach, M., Supino, M., Satriano, C., Trugman, D. T., & Zhang, J. (2024). Earthquake source spectra estimates vary widely for two Ridgecrest aftershocks because of differences in attenuation corrections. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, (submitted).