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The Effectiveness of a Distant Accelerometer Array to Compute Seismic Source Parameters: The April 2009 L'Aquila Earthquake Case History.

Authors :
Maercklin, Nils
Zollo, Aldo
Orefice, Antonella
Festa, Gaetano
Emolo, Antonio
De Matteis, Raffaella
Delouis, Bertrand
Bobbio, Antonella
Source :
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; Feb2011, Vol. 101 Issue 1, p354-365, 12p, 2 Charts, 5 Graphs, 1 Map
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The 6 April 2009 M<subscript>W</subscript> 6.3 L'Aquila earthquake, central Italy, has been recorded by the Irpinia Seismic Network (ISNet) about 250 km southeast of the epicenter. Up to 19 three-component accelerometer stations could be used to infer the main source parameters with different seismological methods. We obtained an approximate location of the event from arrival times and array-based back-azimuth measurements and estimated the local magnitude (6.1) from an attenuation relation for southern Italy. Assuming an omega-square spectral model, we inverted S-wave displacement spectra for moment magnitude (6.3), corner frequency (0.33 Hz), stress drop (2.5 MPa), and apparent stress (1.6 MPa). Waveform modeling using a point source and an extended-source model provided consistent moment tensors with a centroid depth around 6 km and a prevalently normal fault plane solution with a dominant directivity toward the southeast. The relatively high corner frequency and an overestimated moment magnitude of 6.4 from moment tensor inversions are attributed to the rupture directivity effect. To image the rupture geometry, we implemented a beamforming technique that back-projects the recorded direct P-wave amplitudes into the earthquake source region. A northwest-southeast striking rupture of 17 km length is imaged, propagating with an average velocity up to 3 km/s. This value is significantly higher than our estimate of 2.2 km/s from S-wave spectra. Our case study demonstrates that the use of array techniques and a dense accelerometer network can provide quick and robust estimates of source parameters of moderate-sized earthquakes located outside the network. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00371106
Volume :
101
Issue :
1
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
59517578
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1785/0120100124