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April/11/2012 (Mw 8.6), Sumatra

Shengji Wei

Location of Epicenter


Overview

slip map of 2011 Tohoku-oki earthquake The Sumatra earthquake is located near the boundary between the Indo-Australian plate and the Eurasian plates. These plates are converging at rate of about 6 cm/year. The upper figure shows the plate motion and the main rupture zone. The earthquake happened to the west of the interface between the two plates and is a strike-slip event. The lower figure shows a depth profile of the slip model, the corresponding momentrate plot is shown in the upper figure.




DATA Process and Inversion

The source model is obtained by inversion of GSN broadband data downloaded from the IRIS DMC. We analyzed 31 teleseismic P waveforms selected based upon data quality and azimuthal distribution. Waveforms are first converted to displacement by removing the instrument response and then used to constrain the slip history based on a finite fault inverse algorithm (Ji et al, 2002). The epicenter location and point source mechanism (USGS WPhase Moment Tensor Solution) are based on the information provided by NEIC (Lon.=93.063°, ; Lat.=2.311°). 1D velocity model is extracted from the CRUST2.0 global tomography model (Bassin et al., 2000). The fault plane with strike of 20 degree and dip of 64 degree (based on GCMT solution) is used for the inversion.


Result:

Cross-section of slip distribution



Figure 1: Upper: the source time function showing the time evolution of released moment rate. Lower: cumulative slip (arrows show slip vectors, and color coding shows amplitude) and isochrons of the seismic rupture. The rupture times are given relative to the onset of slip at the epicenter.


Comparison of data and synthetic seismograms




Figure 2: Comparison of the observed (black) and modeled (red) teleseismic seismograms (in displacement). Station names are indicated to the left of the traces along with the azimuths and epicentral distances in degrees. Peak amplitude in micron of data is indicated above the end of each trace.


Comments:



Download

(Slip Distribution)

SUBFAULT FORMAT FSP FORMAT CMTSOLUTION FORMAT SOURCE TIME FUNCTION


References

Ji, C., D.J. Wald, and D.V. Helmberger, Source description of the 1999 Hector Mine, California earthquake; Part I: Wavelet domain inversion theory and resolution analysis, Bull. Seism. Soc. Am., Vol 92, No. 4. pp. 1192-1207, 2002.

Bassin, C., Laske, G. and Masters, G., The Current Limits of Resolution for Surface Wave Tomography in North America, EOS Trans AGU, 81, F897, 2000.

USGS National Earthquake Information Center: http://neic.usgs.gov

Global Seismographic Network (GSN) is a cooperative scientific facility operated jointly by the Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology (IRIS), the United States Geological Survey (USGS), and the National Science Foundation (NSF).

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