Green's Functions for Moment Tensor Sources Including the Double Couple Source

Author(s):  
Yongxin Gao ◽  
Hengshan Hu
2019 ◽  
Vol 91 (1) ◽  
pp. 390-398
Author(s):  
Václav Vavryčuk ◽  
Petra Adamová

Abstract We present a joint inversion for empirical Green’s functions (EGFs) and high‐resolution non‐double‐couple (non‐DC) moment tensors. First, the EGFs are constructed using known moment tensors of earthquakes occurring in a small focal zone. Second, the estimated EGFs are applied to refine the original moment tensors used for constructing the EGFs. Because the EGFs describe the velocity model better than the standard GFs, the refined moment tensors are more accurate. The method is applied to real observations of earthquakes of the 2008 swarm in West Bohemia, Czech Republic, where tiny details in fracturing in the focal zone are revealed. Refined moment tensors indicate fault closing caused by compaction of fault gouge during fracturing process related to fault weakening by fluids in the focal zone. The application of the proposed inversion can improve moment tensors reported in existing local, regional, or global catalogs for areas with a concentrated seismicity.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuanhang Huo ◽  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Jie Zhang

The MW 5.7 Changning earthquake occurred in southern Sichuan basin on 17 June 2019 and was the largest event ever recorded in this region. There are still some arguments existing about the causes of the earthquake and its possible links with water injections. Many studies on this earthquake have been performed, but the event depths obtained among them are significantly different and the source mechanisms also exhibit variations. In this study, we design an inversion scheme and use 3D Green’s functions considering the rugged topography of this region to determine the event location and moment tensor of the Changning earthquake based on waveform fittings. The 3D model can reduce the uncertainty due to the approximation of 1D model and better constrain the solutions. The latitude and the longitude of event location are 28.34°N and 104.82°E respectively and the depth is 3.14 km. The nodal plane solutions are strike 295°/dip 88°/rake 14° and strike 204°/dip 76°/rake 178°. The percentages of DC, CLVD and ISO components are 10, −83, and −7%, respectively. The good waveform fittings at 17 broadband stations indicate the reliability of the source mechanism in this study.


1981 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles A. Langston

abstract The treatment of the seismic source inverse problem, when diverse forms of waveform data are available, is simple and elegant using a moment tensor formalism. If earth structure is known and its effects predictable in terms of vertically inhomogeneous elastic-layered models, then all types of wave phenomena (e.g., surface waves, body waves, leaky modes, etc.) for a purely deviatoric moment tensor point source may be represented by, at most, a sum of three Green's functions. For an arbitrary symmetric moment tensor point source, one additional Green's function is needed for the P-SV system. However elegant this formalism may be for posing the linear inverse problem, the major difficulties lie in earth structure unknowns and resultant nonlinearities in the Green's functions which can cause significant trade-offs with source parameters. A hybrid inversion procedure is set up to gain insight into the probable unknowns in particular problems by incorporating both a linearized least-squares gradient method for the moment tensor or double couple, and smoothed time function parameters, and a nonlinear systematic trial-and-error search for moment tensor or double couple parameters for several assumptions of Green's function. The inversion technique is applied to near-regional waveform data from a small earthquake associated with the Koyna Reservoir which occurred 13 September 1967, as the second in a group of three events with very similar waveshapes, but differing amplitudes. The magnitudes of the second and third events are smaller by −0.2 and −0.8 units, respectively, compared to the first. The absolute magnitude for the first event is poorly constrained but is estimated to be 4.0 to 4.5 rather than the previously published value of 5.5 to 6.0. From the similarity of waveshapes, all three events are inferred to have the same mechanism and occurred within about 2 km of the same hypocenter. The results from moment tensor and double couple inversions for event 2 data indicate that source depth was 5 km and that left-lateral faulting occurred on a plane with a strike of N20°E ± 5°, dip of 90° ± 15°, and a rake of 0° ± 35°. The inferred far-field time function is approximately 3 sec in duration, unusually long for the seismic moment of 9 × 1022 dyne-cm, yielding a possible stress drop of about 0.05 bars. A fault map was constructed from LANDSAT image interpretation and shows a predominance of NNW to NNE striking faults in the Koyna area which is used to infer the appropriate nodal plane in the inversion results. These faults tend to define a broad en-echelon zone which parallels the Western Ghats in this area.


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