Combining Seismology and Geodesy to Better Constrain Earthquake Source Parameters and Shallow Fault Behavior

Our current understanding of the Earth’s interior structure and processes is limited to observations made at the surface that are mapped to the subsurface using inverse methods. The complexity of geophysical inverse problems mainly arises from the existence of many free parameters that sometimes hav...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Shakibay Senobari, Nader
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/5t51h74h
id ftcdlib:qt5t51h74h
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Geophysics
Geodesy
Seismology
spellingShingle Geophysics
Geodesy
Seismology
Shakibay Senobari, Nader
Combining Seismology and Geodesy to Better Constrain Earthquake Source Parameters and Shallow Fault Behavior
topic_facet Geophysics
Geodesy
Seismology
description Our current understanding of the Earth’s interior structure and processes is limited to observations made at the surface that are mapped to the subsurface using inverse methods. The complexity of geophysical inverse problems mainly arises from the existence of many free parameters that sometimes have traded off with each other. This can cause inaccuracies, low resolution and non-uniqueness problems in geophysical models. The main focus of my dissertation is on how we can use two independent geophysical data types – geodesy and seismology – to increase knowledge, resolution and accuracy of Earth’s structure, and of interseismic and coseismic processes in the earthquake cycle. For example, in my first project (Chapter 2) I search for repeating earthquakes (REs) using similarity search on recorded seismic waveforms from the northern San Francisco Bay Area. Evidence from the San Andreas fault and elsewhere indicates that REs are correlated with, and likely driven by, aseismic slip (creep) at depth. This is complementary knowledge to the geodetic observation of creep at the surface. The source information of REs can also be used to constrain the interseismic slip models inverted from geodetic data such as GPS and InSAR. By using a new fast similarity search algorithm, that I developed specifically for probing big seismic data sets (described in Chapter 3), we found 198 RE groups, including periodic and nonperiodic repeating earthquake 'families', and repeating event pairs. Our results can not only help us to map the depth and extent of creep on several major faults but also reveal previously unknown structural complexity – e.g. that subparallel strands of the Maacama fault are active and creep simultaneously. Source parameters and locations of these REs can be used to update seismic hazard models, by better constraining the creeping areas of faults in the region, and to improve community models of fault geometry.In a second major project (Chapter 4), I aim to reconcile earthquake source parameters and locations determined by long-period teleseismic source inversions with those obtained from InSAR data. The latter observes earthquakes in situ and thus, we presume, accurately locates them. Previous studies suggest that the discrepancies between these two catalogs arise from the existing inaccuracy in Earth models and are caused by the historic (and circular) problem that earthquake locations estimated using inaccurate velocity models are themselves inaccurate, and vice-versa.In several case studies of various locations (e.g. California, Iceland, central Italy) we observe and quantify the biases of the S40RTS Earth velocity model that cause a delay or early arrival of the predicted seismic waves to the seismic stations at certain azimuths. We gather these misestimations of predicted seismic wave arrivals as corrections that can be applied to teleseismic source inversions in order to improve location accuracy. The similarity of corrections that we observe for events in the same region suggests they could be used as regional corrections. We also show that these corrections not only can be used to accurately locate global events but also can help us to accurately obtain the source mechanisms of these events. In future, by gathering these corrections for all the events with existing InSAR source models (i.e. more than 120 global events so far) we might be able to increase accuracy of velocity models of the upper mantle, e.g. by using finite-frequency tomography.
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Shakibay Senobari, Nader
author_facet Shakibay Senobari, Nader
author_sort Shakibay Senobari, Nader
title Combining Seismology and Geodesy to Better Constrain Earthquake Source Parameters and Shallow Fault Behavior
title_short Combining Seismology and Geodesy to Better Constrain Earthquake Source Parameters and Shallow Fault Behavior
title_full Combining Seismology and Geodesy to Better Constrain Earthquake Source Parameters and Shallow Fault Behavior
title_fullStr Combining Seismology and Geodesy to Better Constrain Earthquake Source Parameters and Shallow Fault Behavior
title_full_unstemmed Combining Seismology and Geodesy to Better Constrain Earthquake Source Parameters and Shallow Fault Behavior
title_sort combining seismology and geodesy to better constrain earthquake source parameters and shallow fault behavior
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2019
url http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/5t51h74h
op_coverage 144
long_lat ENVELOPE(-60.729,-60.729,-64.008,-64.008)
geographic Andreas
geographic_facet Andreas
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source Shakibay Senobari, Nader. (2019). Combining Seismology and Geodesy to Better Constrain Earthquake Source Parameters and Shallow Fault Behavior. UC Riverside: Geological Sciences. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/5t51h74h
op_relation http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/5t51h74h
qt5t51h74h
op_rights Attribution (CC BY): http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
_version_ 1766043830048522240
spelling ftcdlib:qt5t51h74h 2023-05-15T16:53:18+02:00 Combining Seismology and Geodesy to Better Constrain Earthquake Source Parameters and Shallow Fault Behavior Shakibay Senobari, Nader 144 2019-01-01 application/pdf http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/5t51h74h en eng eScholarship, University of California http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/5t51h74h qt5t51h74h Attribution (CC BY): http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ CC-BY Shakibay Senobari, Nader. (2019). Combining Seismology and Geodesy to Better Constrain Earthquake Source Parameters and Shallow Fault Behavior. UC Riverside: Geological Sciences. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/5t51h74h Geophysics Geodesy Seismology dissertation 2019 ftcdlib 2019-05-17T22:52:53Z Our current understanding of the Earth’s interior structure and processes is limited to observations made at the surface that are mapped to the subsurface using inverse methods. The complexity of geophysical inverse problems mainly arises from the existence of many free parameters that sometimes have traded off with each other. This can cause inaccuracies, low resolution and non-uniqueness problems in geophysical models. The main focus of my dissertation is on how we can use two independent geophysical data types – geodesy and seismology – to increase knowledge, resolution and accuracy of Earth’s structure, and of interseismic and coseismic processes in the earthquake cycle. For example, in my first project (Chapter 2) I search for repeating earthquakes (REs) using similarity search on recorded seismic waveforms from the northern San Francisco Bay Area. Evidence from the San Andreas fault and elsewhere indicates that REs are correlated with, and likely driven by, aseismic slip (creep) at depth. This is complementary knowledge to the geodetic observation of creep at the surface. The source information of REs can also be used to constrain the interseismic slip models inverted from geodetic data such as GPS and InSAR. By using a new fast similarity search algorithm, that I developed specifically for probing big seismic data sets (described in Chapter 3), we found 198 RE groups, including periodic and nonperiodic repeating earthquake 'families', and repeating event pairs. Our results can not only help us to map the depth and extent of creep on several major faults but also reveal previously unknown structural complexity – e.g. that subparallel strands of the Maacama fault are active and creep simultaneously. Source parameters and locations of these REs can be used to update seismic hazard models, by better constraining the creeping areas of faults in the region, and to improve community models of fault geometry.In a second major project (Chapter 4), I aim to reconcile earthquake source parameters and locations determined by long-period teleseismic source inversions with those obtained from InSAR data. The latter observes earthquakes in situ and thus, we presume, accurately locates them. Previous studies suggest that the discrepancies between these two catalogs arise from the existing inaccuracy in Earth models and are caused by the historic (and circular) problem that earthquake locations estimated using inaccurate velocity models are themselves inaccurate, and vice-versa.In several case studies of various locations (e.g. California, Iceland, central Italy) we observe and quantify the biases of the S40RTS Earth velocity model that cause a delay or early arrival of the predicted seismic waves to the seismic stations at certain azimuths. We gather these misestimations of predicted seismic wave arrivals as corrections that can be applied to teleseismic source inversions in order to improve location accuracy. The similarity of corrections that we observe for events in the same region suggests they could be used as regional corrections. We also show that these corrections not only can be used to accurately locate global events but also can help us to accurately obtain the source mechanisms of these events. In future, by gathering these corrections for all the events with existing InSAR source models (i.e. more than 120 global events so far) we might be able to increase accuracy of velocity models of the upper mantle, e.g. by using finite-frequency tomography. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Iceland University of California: eScholarship Andreas ENVELOPE(-60.729,-60.729,-64.008,-64.008)