Significance of stress transfer in time-dependent earthquake probability calculations

被引:68
|
作者
Parsons, T [1 ]
机构
[1] US Geol Survey, Menlo Pk, CA 94025 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1029/2004JB003190
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
[1] A sudden change in stress is seen to modify earthquake rates, but should it also revise earthquake probability? Data used to derive input parameters permit an array of forecasts; so how large a static stress change is required to cause a statistically significant earthquake probability change? To answer that question, effects of parameter and philosophical choices are examined through all phases of sample calculations. Drawing at random from distributions of recurrence-aperiodicity pairs identifies many that recreate long paleoseismic and historic earthquake catalogs. Probability density functions built from the recurrence-aperiodicity pairs give the range of possible earthquake forecasts under a point process renewal model. Consequences of choices made in stress transfer calculations, such as different slip models, fault rake, dip, and friction are tracked. For interactions among large faults, calculated peak stress changes may be localized, with most of the receiving fault area changed less than the mean. Thus, to avoid overstating probability change on segments, stress change values should be drawn from a distribution reflecting the spatial pattern rather than using the segment mean. Disparity resulting from interaction probability methodology is also examined. For a fault with a well-understood earthquake history, a minimum stress change to stressing rate ratio of 10: 1 to 20: 1 is required to significantly skew probabilities with > 80-85% confidence. That ratio must be closer to 50: 1 to exceed 90-95% confidence levels. Thus revision to earthquake probability is achievable when a perturbing event is very close to the fault in question or the tectonic stressing rate is low.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 20
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Time-dependent response calculations of nuclear resonances
    Umar, AS
    Oberacker, VE
    PHYSICAL REVIEW C, 2005, 71 (03):
  • [22] CALCULATIONS OF THE TIME-DEPENDENT UNAVAILABILITY OF MONITORED COMPONENTS
    DICKEY, JM
    GINZBURG, T
    HALL, RE
    TRANSACTIONS OF THE AMERICAN NUCLEAR SOCIETY, 1981, 39 : 576 - 577
  • [23] TIME-DEPENDENT CALCULATIONS FOR TRANSONIC NOZZLE FLOW
    MIGDAL, D
    KLEIN, K
    MORETTI, G
    AIAA JOURNAL, 1969, 7 (02) : 372 - &
  • [24] MORE TIME-DEPENDENT CALCULATIONS FOR SCHRODINGER EQUATION
    BOLEMON, JS
    HALEY, SB
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSICS, 1975, 43 (03) : 270 - 271
  • [25] TIME-DEPENDENT CALCULATIONS OF MOLECULAR PHOTODISSOCIATION RESONANCES
    KULANDER, KC
    CERJAN, C
    OREL, AE
    JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 1991, 94 (04): : 2571 - 2577
  • [26] Photodissociation of DOBr -: Time-dependent wavepacket calculations
    Brown, A
    Balint-Kurti, GG
    Füsti-Molnár, L
    PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY CHEMICAL PHYSICS, 2001, 3 (18) : 3973 - 3980
  • [27] STATISTICAL DYNAMICS CALCULATIONS OF TIME-DEPENDENT SEISMICITY
    LOMNITZADLER, J
    TECTONOPHYSICS, 1989, 169 (1-3) : 207 - 213
  • [28] Time-dependent radiative transfer with PHOENIX
    Jack, D.
    Hauschildt, P. H.
    Baron, E.
    ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS, 2009, 502 (03): : 1043 - 1049
  • [29] ON TIME-DEPENDENT RADIATIVE-TRANSFER
    STREATER, A
    COOPER, J
    SANDLE, W
    JOURNAL OF QUANTITATIVE SPECTROSCOPY & RADIATIVE TRANSFER, 1987, 37 (02): : 151 - 156
  • [30] THE PHYSICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF TIME-DEPENDENT TRANSITION RATES
    HALPERN, V
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICS-CONDENSED MATTER, 1994, 6 (44) : 9451 - 9458