Resolving Differences in the Rupture Properties of Prominent Earthquakes
in Southern California with Bayesian Source Spectral Analysis
- Daniel T. Trugman
Abstract
The spectra of earthquake waveforms can provide important insight into
rupture processes, but the analysis and interpretation of these spectra
is rarely straightforward. Here we develop a Bayesian framework that
embraces the inherent data and modeling uncertainties of spectral
analysis to infer key source properties. The method uses a spectral
ratio approach to correct the observed waveform spectra of nearby
earthquakes for path and site attenuation. The objective then is to
solve for a joint posterior probability distribution of three source
parameters -- seismic moment, corner frequency, and high-frequency
falloff rate -- for each earthquake in the sequence, as well as a
measure of rupture directivity for target events with good azimuthal
station coverage. While computationally intensive, this technique
provides a quantitative understanding of parameter tradeoffs and
uncertainties and allows one to impose physical constraints through
prior distributions on all source parameters, which guide the inversion
when data is limited. We demonstrate the method by analyzing in detail
the source properties of 14 different target events of magnitude M5 in
southern California that span a wide range of tectonic regimes and fault
systems. These prominent earthquakes, while comparable in size, exhibit
marked diversity in their source properties and directivity, with clear
spatial patterns, depth-dependent trends, and a preference for
unilateral directivity. These coherent spatial variations source
properties suggest that regional differences in tectonic setting,
hypocentral depth or fault zone characteristics may drive variability in
rupture processes, with important implications for our understanding of
earthquake physics and its relation to hazard.