SCEC Project Details
SCEC Award Number | 12071 | View PDF | |||||
Proposal Category | Individual Proposal (Integration and Theory) | ||||||
Proposal Title | Heterogeneity, rotations and volumetric strain near faults from focal mechanism data | ||||||
Investigator(s) |
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Other Participants | USC grad student Yaman Ozakin | ||||||
SCEC Priorities | 2d, 3c, 3d | SCEC Groups | SDOT, Seismology, FARM | ||||
Report Due Date | 03/15/2013 | Date Report Submitted | N/A |
Project Abstract |
Studies under this project attempt to quantify large-scale heterogeneities, rotations and volumetric changes of stress-strain fields around large rupture zones. The research employs a combination of observational and theoretical results focusing on the following two main research directions. (i) Detailed analyses of rotations of double-couple-constrained focal mechanisms in space-time regions with high density of earthquakes. (ii) Derivations of full source tensors of earthquakes including isotropic components of radiation. The study supported a PhD student and led to two submitted papers and several related meeting abstracts. The results contribute to improved derivations and interpretation of earthquake source properties. This, in turn, contributes to improved understanding of physical processes in major southern California fault zones. |
Intellectual Merit |
The theoretical connections between rock damage in earthquake source volumes, isotropic radiation and rotations of double-couple-constrained mechanisms provide new signals that can be used to understand earthquake and fault processes. The studies contribute to the following long-term research goals of SCEC4: Seismology – “… improving the estimation of source parameters…”, “Investigate near-fault crustal properties, evaluate fault structural complexity…” Earthquake Geology – “…damage in relation to the rupture propagation processes…” |
Broader Impacts |
The results contribute to improved derivations and interpretation of earthquake source properties. This, in turn, contributes to improved understanding of physical processes in major southern California fault zones. The study supported a PhD student |
Exemplary Figure | Fig. 1 (caption and credit in the figure) |
Linked Publications
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