Accuracy and Precision of Earthquake Location Programs: Insights from a Synthetic Controlled Experiment

Yifan Yu, William L. Ellsworth, & Gregory C. Beroza

Accepted September 4, 2024, SCEC Contribution #14069

Earthquake location programs employ diverse approaches to address the challenges posed by incomplete knowledge and simplified representation of complex Earth structure. Assessing their reliability in location and uncertainty characterization remains challenging as benchmark datasets with known event locations are rare, and usually confined to particular sources, such as quarry blasts. This study evaluates eight earthquake location methods (GrowClust, HypoDD, Hypoinverse, HypoSVI, NonLinLoc, NonLinLoc\_SSST, Velest, and XCORLOC) through a controlled synthetic computational experiment based on the setting of the 2019 Ridgecrest, California earthquake sequence. We construct a travel time dataset using the Fast-Marching Method and a 3D velocity model extracted from the Community Velocity Model, supplemented with a von Karman perturbation to represent small-scale heterogeneity, and including elevation effects. Picking errors, phase availability, and outliers are introduced to mimic difficulties encountered in seismic network monitoring. We compare the location results from eight programs applied to the same travel time dataset and 1D velocity structure against the ground truth locations. Our results reveal the superior accuracy and precision of differential time based location methods compared to single event location methods, and validate the significance of compensating for deviations from assumed 1D velocity structure either by path or site correction modeling or by cancellation of unmodeled structure using differential arrival times. We also evaluate the uncertainty quantification of each program and find that most of the programs underestimate the errors.

Citation
Yu, Y., Ellsworth, W. L., & Beroza, G. C. (2024). Accuracy and Precision of Earthquake Location Programs: Insights from a Synthetic Controlled Experiment. Seismological Research Letters, (accepted).