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Nikolai M. Shapiro
Public Documents
3
Detection, classification, and location of seismovolcanic signals with multi-componen...
Cyril Journeau
and 4 more
May 09, 2020
We apply three different methods based on the analysis of the multi-component seismic data to detect seismovolcanic tremors and other seismovolcanic signals, to propose an approach to classify them and to locate their sources. We use continuous seismograms recorded during one year by 21 stations at the Piton de la Fournaise volcano (La RĂ©union, France). The first method allows to detect seismovolcanic signals based on stability in time of the inter-components cross-correlations function. Two other methods based on the simultaneous analysis of the whole network can be used to detect seismovolcanic signals and to locate their sources. In a second approach, the seismic wavefield is analyzed by calculating the width of the network covariance matrix eigenvalue distribution. The third method consists in performing the 3D back-projection of the inter-stations crosscorrelations in order to calculate the network response function. Simultaneous analysis of the parameters measured by the three different methods can be used to classify different types of seismovolcanic tremors. Our results demonstrate that all three methods efficiently detect seismovolcanic tremors accompanying the 2010 eruptions and the preceding pre-eruptive seismic swarms. Furthermore, methods 2 and 3 based on simultaneous analysis of the whole network detect a large number of volcanic earthquakes. Our location results show that each seismovolcanic tremor is located in a distinct region of the volcano, close to the eruptive site at a shallow depth and the preceding seismic crisis is located deeper at about the sea level under the summit crater.
Moment-duration scaling of Low-Frequency Earthquakes in Guerrero, Mexico
Gaspard Farge
and 2 more
June 29, 2020
Low-frequency earthquakes (LFEs) are detected within tremor, as small, repetitive, impulsive low-frequency (1-8 Hz) signals. While the mechanism causing this depletion of the high frequency content of their signal is still debated, this feature may indicate that the source processes at the origin of LFEs are different from those for regular earthquakes. Key constraints on the LFE-generating physical mechanisms can be obtained by establishing scaling laws between their seismic moment and source durations. Here we apply a simple spectral analysis method to the S-waveforms of LFEs from Guerrero, Mexico to measure their seismic moments and corner frequencies, a proxy to source duration. We find characteristic values of seismic moment around 3e12 N.m (Mw 2.3) and of corner frequencies around 3 Hz with the corner frequency very weakly dependent on the seismic moment. This moment-duration scaling observed for Mexican LFE is similar to one previously reported in Cascadia and is very different from the established one for regular earthquakes. This suggests that they could be generated by sources of nearly constant size with strongly varying intensities. LFEs do not exhibit the self-similarity characteristic of regular earthquakes, suggesting that the physical mechanisms at their origin could be intrinsically different.
Mantle and crustal sources of magmatic activity of Klyuchevskoy and surrounding volca...
Koulakov Ivan
and 11 more
July 30, 2020
Klyuchevskoy and surrounding volcanoes in central Kamchatka form the Northern Group of Volcanoes (NGV), which is an area of the particularly diverse and intensive Pleistocene-Holocene volcanism. In this study, we present a new seismic tomographic model of the crust and uppermost mantle beneath NGV based on local earthquake data recorded by several permanent and temporary seismic networks including a large-scale KISS experiment that was conducted in 2015-2016 by an international scientific consortium. The new model has for Kamchatka an unprecedented resolution and reveals many features associated with the present and past volcanic activity within the NGV. In the upper crust, we found several prominent high-velocity anomalies interpreted as traces of large basaltic shield volcanoes, which were hidden by more recent volcanic structures and sediments. For the mantle structures, we found that the entire system of NGV was fed by an asthenospheric flow arriving through a slab window located below the Kamchatka-Aleutian junction. The interaction of the hot asthenospheric material with fluids released from the slab determines the particular volcanic activity within the NVG. We argue that the eastern branch of the Central Kamchatka Depression, which is associated with a prominent low-velocity anomaly in the uppermost mantle, was formed as a recent rift zone separating the NGV from the Kamchatka Eastern Ranges.