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Journal ArticleDOI

Tectonic stress and the spectra of seismic shear waves from earthquakes

James N. Brune
- 10 Sep 1970 - 
- Vol. 75, Iss: 26, pp 4997-5009
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TLDR
In this paper, an earthquake model is derived by considering the effective stress available to accelerate the sides of the fault, and the model describes near and far-field displacement-time functions and spectra and includes the effect of fractional stress drop.
Abstract
An earthquake model is derived by considering the effective stress available to accelerate the sides of the fault. The model describes near- and far-field displacement-time functions and spectra and includes the effect of fractional stress drop. It successfully explains the near- and far-field spectra observed for earthquakes and indicates that effective stresses are of the order of 100 bars. For this stress, the estimated upper limit of near-fault particle velocity is 100 cm/sec, and the estimated upper limit for accelerations is approximately 2g at 10 Hz and proportionally lower for lower frequencies. The near field displacement u is approximately given by u(t) = (σ/μ) βr(1 - e−t/r) where. σ is the effective stress, μ is the rigidity, β is the shear wave velocity, and τ is of the order of the dimension of the fault divided by the shear-wave velocity. The corresponding spectrum is Ω(ω)=σβμ1ω(ω2+τ−2)1/2(1) The rms average far-field spectrum is given by 〈 Ω(ω) 〉=〈 Rθϕ 〉σβμrRF(e)1ω2+α2(2) where 〈Rθϕ〉 is the rms average of the radiation pattern; r is the radius of an equivalent circular dislocation surface; R is the distance; F(e) = {[2 – 2e][1 – cos (1.21 eω/α)] +e2}1/2; e is the fraction of stress drop; and α = 2.21 β/r. The rms spectrum falls off as (ω/α)−2 at very high frequencies. For values of ω/α between 1 and 10 the rms spectrum falls off as (ω/α)−1 for e < ∼0.1. At low frequencies the spectrum reduces to the spectrum for a double-couple point source of appropriate moment. Effective stress, stress drop and source dimensions may be estimated by comparing observed seismic spectra with the theoretical spectra.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Observations constraining near-source ground motion estimated from locally recorded seismograms

TL;DR: In this article, the authors derived the relationship between peak far-field velocity v and peak acceleration a, and the source processes of the asperity, D and D, as well as its radius r, under the assumption that r = kβ/ω, where ω is the angular frequency of the sinusoidal velocity pulse of maximum amplitude, β is the sheaf wave speed, and k is a constant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling of Strong-Motion Data in Northeastern India: Q, Stress Drop, and Site Amplification

TL;DR: In this paper, a point source seismological model is used to model the available strong-motion accelerograms in northeastern India and key seismic parameters such as Quality factor (Q -value), kappa factor (κ 0 ), site amplification, and stress drop are derived from the strong motion data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Scaling relations and spectral characteristics of tensile microseisms: evidence for opening/closing cracks during hydraulic fracturing

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated spectral characteristics of microearthquakes induced by hydraulic fracturing, with application to passive-seismic data recorded during a multistage treatment programme in western Canada.
Journal Article

Slip-generated patterns of swarm microearthquakes from West Bohemia/Vogtland (central Europe) : Evidence of their triggering mechanism? : Stress transfer, earthquake triggering, and time-dependent seismic hazard

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated space-time relations between consecutive events of West Bohemian 2000 swarm and their association with the Coulomb stress changes induced on a fault plane by prior swarm events.

Short Notes What We Can and Cannot Learn about Earthquake Sources from the Spectra of Seismic Waves

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that the slip velocity on the fault is the real parameter that controls the strength of the highfrequency radiation; it can be directly determined from acceleration spectra by fitting their high-frequency level.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Scaling law of seismic spectrum

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the dependence of the amplitude spectrum of seismic waves on source size by fitting an exponentially decaying function to the autocorrelation function of the dislocation velocity and found that the most convenient parameter for their purpose is the magnitude Ms, defined for surface waves with period of 20 sec.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stick-slip as a mechanism for earthquakes.

TL;DR: Stick-slip often accompanies frictional sliding in laboratory experi ments with geologic materials and may represent stick slip during sliding along old or newly formed faults in the earth.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnitude and energy of earthquakes

TL;DR: In this article, the relation of earthquake magnitude M to energy E (in ergs) was investigated and three different magnitude scales were proposed: M_L, the magnitude originally defined by Richter for local earthquakes in California as recorded on standard torsion seismometers, M_S, based on calculated ground amplitudes for surface waves of periods of about 20 sec. in shallow teleseisms, and M_B, that based on the amplitude/period ratio in body waves for both shallow and deep earthquakes.
Book ChapterDOI

Total energy and energy spectral density of elastic wave radiation from propagating faults

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that a shear fault is rigorously equivalent to a distribution of double-couple point sources over the fault plane, while a tensile fault is composed of force dipoles normal to the fault surface with a superimposed purely compressional component.
Journal ArticleDOI

Body force equivalents for seismic dislocations

TL;DR: In this paper, an explicit expression for the body force to be applied in the absence of a dislocation, which produces radiation identical to that of the dislocation was derived for dislocations in an anisotropic inhomogeneous medium.