The 4 January 2006 (Mw 6.6), San Pedro Martir Earthquake: Example of an Earthquake for Calibrating Excitation and Attenuation Studies

2019 ◽  
Vol 109 (6) ◽  
pp. 2399-2414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luis Quintanar ◽  
Roberto Ortega ◽  
Héctor E. Rodríguez‐Lozoya ◽  
Tonatiuh Domínguez‐Reyes

Abstract An earthquake of magnitude 6.6 occurred on 4 January 2006, at 28.081° N and 112.381° W along a transform fault that joins the San Pedro Martir and the Guaymas basins in the Gulf of California extensional province. We located 17 foreshocks and 38 aftershocks. The foreshocks occurred on a fault perpendicular to the transform fault, where the main event occurred. The aftershocks were located along a fault length of approximately 18 km with a northwest–southeast trend. The average Brune static stress drop of the San Pedro Martir event was 8 MPa. From a time‐domain moment tensor inversion, we obtained the fault geometry given by strike of 129°±1°, dip of 86°±4°, and rake of 168°±12°, which was constrained to have a nonisotropic component and a source depth of 6±2  km. We used the inversion code from Yagi et al. (1999) to invert near field and teleseismic P waves to obtain the spatial slip distribution over the fault. The event had a single source and a moment rate function (MRF) displaying a triangular shape with a duration of 12 s. The rupture propagated toward the northwest from the hypocenter over a rupture area of 28×12  km2 with a maximum slip displacement of 2.3 m and a seismic moment of 8.79×1018  N·m. The directivity confirmed that the rupture propagated from the southeast to the northwest. Few aftershocks were located in the rupture area obtained from the inversion. Most aftershocks occurred toward the southeast of the epicenter. All these source analyses were performed to have a well‐calibrated excitation term for future regional modeling of ground‐motion parameters. The magnitudes of the foreshocks preceding this peculiar earthquake were higher than those of the aftershocks. Our results show that earthquakes with magnitudes of five or higher present a simple and self‐scaling law using a constant stress parameter, but for earthquakes with magnitudes lower than five, the high frequencies are depleted, and the earthquake can be replicated by a low‐stress parameter of 0.28 MPa. We also observed that the aftershocks and foreshocks differ in their frequency content. Although the foreshocks follow Brune’s omega‐squared source term, the aftershocks have larger contents of high frequencies.

2021 ◽  
Vol 83 (8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Luis M. Alva-Valdivia ◽  
Jesús R. Vidal-Solano ◽  
Luis A. Velderrain-Rojas ◽  
José A. González-Rangel

2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hijrah Saputra ◽  
Wahyudi Wahyudi ◽  
Iman Suardi ◽  
Ade Anggraini ◽  
Wiwit Suryanto

AbstractThis study comprehensively investigates the source mechanisms associated with the mainshock and aftershocks of the Mw = 6.3 Yogyakarta earthquake which occurred on May 27, 2006. The process involved using moment tensor inversion to determine the fault plane parameters and joint inversion which were further applied to understand the spatial and temporal slip distributions during the earthquake. Moreover, coseismal slip distribution was overlaid with the relocated aftershock distribution to determine the stress field variations around the tectonic area. Meanwhile, the moment tensor inversion made use of near-field data and its Green’s function was calculated using the extended reflectivity method while the joint inversion used near-field and teleseismic body wave data which were computed using the Kikuchi and Kanamori methods. These data were filtered through a trial-and-error method using a bandpass filter with frequency pairs and velocity models from several previous studies. Furthermore, the Akaike Bayesian Information Criterion (ABIC) method was applied to obtain more stable inversion results and different fault types were discovered. Strike–slip and dip-normal were recorded for the mainshock and similar types were recorded for the 8th aftershock while the 9th and 16th June were strike slips. However, the fault slip distribution from the joint inversion showed two asperities. The maximum slip was 0.78 m with the first asperity observed at 10 km south/north of the mainshock hypocenter. The source parameters discovered include total seismic moment M0 = 0.4311E + 19 (Nm) or Mw = 6.4 with a depth of 12 km and a duration of 28 s. The slip distribution overlaid with the aftershock distribution showed the tendency of the aftershock to occur around the asperities zone while a normal oblique focus mechanism was found using the joint inversion.


Author(s):  
Susana Camarillo-Coop ◽  
César A. Salinas-Zavala ◽  
Marlenne Manzano-Sarabia ◽  
Eugenio Alberto Aragón-Noriega

The jumbo squid Dosidicus gigas is the only ommastrephid commercially caught in Mexico. Despite the economic and ecological importance of this species, little is known about its early life stages. The relationship between the presence of paralarvae and mesoscale oceanic features was investigated for the first time in the central Gulf of California, Mexico in February, April, June and September of 2008. A total of 86 paralarvae were found only in June and September (summer season), in the well-stratified column water where the thermocline was evident and warm sea surface waters (27.7° to 29.4°C) dominated. The greatest abundance of D. gigas paralarvae was observed within 2.23 to 3.48 km of the main front. The mantle length of the smallest paralarvae corresponded with the mantle length at hatching. The San Pedro Mártir Island–Santa Rosalia transect and Santa Rosalia–Guaymas transect were determined as the main hatching localities in June and September respectively. The number of paralarvae found in this study contrast with the potential fecundity of mature females which are found throughout the year.


2019 ◽  
Vol 866 ◽  
pp. 61-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandeep Hatte ◽  
Keshav Pandey ◽  
Khushboo Pandey ◽  
Suman Chakraborty ◽  
Saptarshi Basu

Manipulation of an array of surface droplets organised in an ordered structure turns out to be of immense consequence in a wide variety of applications ranging from photonics, near field imaging and inkjet printing on the one hand to bio-molecular analysis and DNA sequencing on the other. While evaporation of a single isolated sessile droplet has been well studied, the collective evaporative dynamics of an ordered array of droplets on a solid substrate remains elusive. Physically, the closed region between the centre and side droplets in the ordered array reduces the mobility of the diffusing vapour, resulting in its accumulation along with enhanced local concentration and a consequent increment in the lifetime of the centre droplet. Here, we present a theoretical model to account for evaporation lifetime scaling in closely placed ordered linear droplet arrays. In addition, the present theory predicts the limiting cases of droplet interaction; namely, critical droplet separation for which interfacial interaction ceases to exist and minimum possible droplet separation (droplets on the verge of coalescence) for which the droplet system achieves maximum lifetime scaling. Further experimental evidence demonstrates the applicability of the present scaling theory to extended dimensions of the droplet array, generalising our physical conjecture. It is also worth noting that the theoretical time scale is applicable across a wide variety of drop–substrate combinations and initial droplet volumes. We also highlight that the scaling law proposed here can be extended seamlessly to other forms of confinement such as an evaporating droplet inside a mini-channel, as encountered in countless applications ranging from biomedical engineering to surface patterning.


Author(s):  
Yong Thung Cho ◽  
M J Roan ◽  
J S Bolton

Acoustical holography procedures make high-resolution visualization possible via estimation of the sound intensity on surfaces closer to the sources than the near-field measurement surface. Another source localization technique, beamforming, has been used to estimate the direction of arrival of sound from sources that typically lie in the far-field. However, little work has been done using beamforming as a visualization technique based on near-field measurements. As a result, the performance of beamforming and acoustical holography in terms of source resolution capabilities has not been directly compared when using near-field measurements. In this work, point source beamforming was used to visualize sources based on near-field measurements. Acoustic intensity estimated from beamformed pressure measurements was compared with the absolute intensity estimated using acoustical holography techniques. In addition to noise-free, anechoic simulations, cases of measurement pressure with random noise were generated and used to compare source resolution accuracy of acoustical holography and beamforming techniques in the presence of measurement noise. It was found that intensity estimated using acoustical holography provided the clearest image of sources when the measurement surface was conformal with the source geometry. However, sources can be resolved more accurately using near-field beamforming than acoustical holography at high frequencies when the sources are not located perfectly on a surface conformal with the measurement geometry.


2019 ◽  
Vol 219 (2) ◽  
pp. 1148-1162
Author(s):  
Jiun-Ting Lin ◽  
Wu-Lung Chang ◽  
Diego Melgar ◽  
Amanda Thomas ◽  
Chi-Yu Chiu

SUMMARY We test the feasibility of GPS-based rapid centroid moment tensor (GPS CMT) methods for Taiwan, one of the most earthquake prone areas in the world. In recent years, Taiwan has become a leading developer of seismometer-based earthquake early warning systems, which have successfully been applied to several large events. The rapid determination of earthquake magnitude and focal mechanism, important for a number of rapid response applications, including tsunami warning, is still challenging because of the limitations of near-field inertial recordings. This instrumental issue can be solved by an entirely different observation system: a GPS network. Taiwan is well posed to take advantage of GPS because in the last decade it has developed a very dense network. Thus, in this research, we explore the suitability of the GPS CMT inversion for Taiwan. We retrospectively investigate six moderate to large (Mw6.0 ∼ 7.0) earthquakes and propose a resolution test for our model, we find that the minimum resolvable earthquake magnitude of this system is ∼Mw5.5 (at 5 km depth). Our tests also suggest that the finite fault complexity, often challenging for the near-field methodology, can be ignored under such good station coverage and thus, can provide a fast and robust solution for large earthquake directly from the near field. Our findings help to understand and quantify how the proposed methodology could be implemented in real time and what its contributions could be to the overall earthquake monitoring system.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document