A WAY TO SYNCHRONIZE MODELS WITH SEISMIC FAULTS FOR EARTHQUAKE FORECASTING: INSIGHTS FROM A SIMPLE STOCHASTIC MODEL
- DSpace Home
- →
- Геология России
- →
- ELibrary
- →
- View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
A WAY TO SYNCHRONIZE MODELS WITH SEISMIC FAULTS FOR EARTHQUAKE FORECASTING: INSIGHTS FROM A SIMPLE STOCHASTIC MODEL
González Á.; Gómez J.B.; Vázquez-Prada M.; Pacheco A.F.
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-citation:
Tectonophysics, 2006, 424, 3-4, 319-334
Date:
2006
Abstract:
Numerical models are starting to be used for determining the future behaviour of seismic faults and fault networks. Their final goal would be to forecast future large earthquakes. In order to use them for this task, it is necessary to synchronize each model with the current status of the actual fault or fault network it simulates (just as, for example, meteorologists synchronize their models with the atmosphere by incorporating current atmospheric data in them). However, lithospheric dynamics is largely unobservable: important parameters cannot (or can rarely) be measured in Nature. Earthquakes, though, provide indirect but measurable clues of the stress and strain status in the lithosphere, which should be helpful for the synchronization of the models. The rupture area is one of the measurable parameters of earthquakes. Here we explore how it can be used to at least synchronize fault models between themselves and forecast synthetic earthquakes. Our purpose here is to forecast synthetic earthquakes in a simple but stochastic (random) fault model. By imposing the rupture area of the synthetic earthquakes of this model on other models, the latter become partially synchronized with the first one. We use these partially synchronized models to successfully forecast most of the largest earthquakes generated by the first model. This forecasting strategy outperforms others that only take into account the earthquake series. Our results suggest that probably a good way to synchronize more detailed models with real faults is to force them to reproduce the sequence of previous earthquake ruptures on the faults. This hypothesis could be tested in the future with more detailed models and actual seismic data. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Files in this item
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
-
ELibrary
Метаданные публикаций с сайта https://www.elibrary.ru
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Nicholson T.; Gudmundsson O.; Sambridge M. (2004)We investigate the constraints that may be placed on earthquake epicentres without assuming a model for seismic wave speed variation within the Earth. This allows location improvements achieved using 1-D or 3-D models to ...
-
Ouillon G.; Sornette D. (2004)We propose a new test of the critical earthquake model based on the hypothesis that precursory earthquakes are `actors' that create fluctuations in the stress field which exhibit an increasing correlation length as the ...
-
Polets A.Yu.; Zlobin T.K. (Дальневосточное отделение Российской академии наук, 2017)This paper presents the results of the May 27 (28), 1995 Neftegorsk earthquake source waveform inversion. Waveform inversion has been done on the basis of data from the Global Seismic Network. Development of the 1995 ...
Search DSpace
Browse
-
All of DSpace
-
This Collection