Phenomena preceding major earthquakes interconnected through a physical model
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Published:2019-05-10
Issue:3
Volume:37
Page:315-324
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ISSN:1432-0576
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Container-title:Annales Geophysicae
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Ann. Geophys.
Author:
Varotsos Panayiotis A., Sarlis Nicholas V.ORCID, Skordas Efthimios S.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The analysis of earthquake time series in a new time domain termed
natural time enables the uncovering of hidden properties in time series of
complex systems and has been recently employed as the basis of a method to
estimate seismic risk. Natural time also enables the determination of the
order parameter of seismicity, which is a quantity by means of which one can identify when the system approaches the critical point (the mainshock
occurrence is considered the new phase). Applying this analysis, as an
example, to the Japanese seismic data from 1 January 1984 until the
super-giant M 9 Tōhoku earthquake on 11 March 2011, we find
that almost 3 months before its occurrence the entropy change of seismicity under time
reversal is minimized on 22 December 2010, which signals an impending major
earthquake. On this date the order parameter fluctuations of seismicity
exhibit an abrupt increase. This increase is accompanied by various phenomena; e.g., from this date the horizontal GPS azimuths start to become gradually
oriented toward the southern direction, while they had random orientation
during the preceding period. Two weeks later, a minimum of the order
parameter fluctuations of seismicity appears accompanied by anomalous Earth
magnetic field variations and by full alignment of the orientations of GPS
azimuths southwards leading to the most intense crust uplift. These phenomena
are discussed and found to be in accordance with a physical model which
seems to explain on a unified basis anomalous precursory changes observed
either in ground-based measurements or in satellite data.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Atmospheric Science,Geology,Astronomy and Astrophysics
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