Poster #038, Seismology
Does earthquake stress drop increase with depth?
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Poster Presentation
2020 SCEC Annual Meeting, Poster #038, SCEC Contribution #10725 VIEW PDF
ce depth. We test this assumption by investigating whether a realistic increase in Q with depth (as is widely observed) could remove some of the observed apparent increase in stress drop with depth.
We combine event spectra from over 50,000 earthquakes (M0-5) from 12 studies in northern California [Hardebeck & Aron, 2009; Trugman & Shearer, 2018; Zhang et al., 2019], southern California [Chen & Shearer, 2011; Trugman & Shearer, 2017; Shearer et al., 2019, Trugman, 2020; Goebel et al., 2015], Kansas [Trugman et al., 2017], Oklahoma [Chen & Abercrombie, 2020; Pennington, 2020] and Nevada.
For different magnitude bins, we compare the ratio of the high- to low-frequency amplitudes and find that the relative high-frequency content (and corner frequency) always increases with increasing earthquake depth. By analyzing spectral ratios between large and small events as a function of source depth, we explore the relative importance of source and attenuation contributions to the observed depth dependence in high-frequency radiation and corner frequency.
Without any correction for depth-dependent attenuation, we find a systematic increase in stress drop with depth (or increase in rupture velocity), as has previously been observed. When we add an empirical attenuation correction, the depth dependence of stress drop systematically decreases, often becoming negligible. The largest corrections are observed in regions with the largest velocity increase with depth. We conclude that spectral decomposition analyses should not assume path terms are independent of source depth, and should more explicitly consider depth-dependent attenuation models.
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We combine event spectra from over 50,000 earthquakes (M0-5) from 12 studies in northern California [Hardebeck & Aron, 2009; Trugman & Shearer, 2018; Zhang et al., 2019], southern California [Chen & Shearer, 2011; Trugman & Shearer, 2017; Shearer et al., 2019, Trugman, 2020; Goebel et al., 2015], Kansas [Trugman et al., 2017], Oklahoma [Chen & Abercrombie, 2020; Pennington, 2020] and Nevada.
For different magnitude bins, we compare the ratio of the high- to low-frequency amplitudes and find that the relative high-frequency content (and corner frequency) always increases with increasing earthquake depth. By analyzing spectral ratios between large and small events as a function of source depth, we explore the relative importance of source and attenuation contributions to the observed depth dependence in high-frequency radiation and corner frequency.
Without any correction for depth-dependent attenuation, we find a systematic increase in stress drop with depth (or increase in rupture velocity), as has previously been observed. When we add an empirical attenuation correction, the depth dependence of stress drop systematically decreases, often becoming negligible. The largest corrections are observed in regions with the largest velocity increase with depth. We conclude that spectral decomposition analyses should not assume path terms are independent of source depth, and should more explicitly consider depth-dependent attenuation models.
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