2008 Joint Fall Meeting of the Texas and Four Corners Sections of APS, AAPT, and Zones 13 and 16 of SPS, and the Societies of Hispanic & Black Physicists
Volume 53, Number 11
Friday–Saturday, October 17–18, 2008;
El Paso, Texas
Session B1: Earth Science and Atmospheric Physics
10:30 AM–12:06 PM,
Friday, October 17, 2008
Union East, 3rd Floor
Room: Templeton
Chair: Rosa Fitzgerald, The University of Texas at El Paso
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.TS4CF.B1.1
Abstract: B1.00001 : Earthquake Amplitudes and Crustal Attenuation in Asia and the Globe
10:30 AM–10:54 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Thomas Hearn
(New Mexico State University)
Seismic amplitudes are routinely measured for the estimation of
earthquake
magnitude. These data can also be used to interrogate the Earth's
attenuation structure using seismic amplitude tomography. Amplitude
tomography produces maps of crustal attenuation and is similar to
conventional seismic travel time tomography, which maps velocity
variations.
Seismic amplitudes are influenced by source size, geometrical
raypath
spreading, attenuation due to intrinsic absorption and
scattering, and
station site gain. These effects are all included in the
tomographic inverse
problem and applied to data from Asia and the Globe.
Data are from the Chinese National Seismic Network and one
international
data set from the International Seismological Center. The Chinese
data cover
most of China. They are measurements for the ML and MS magnitude
scales and
represent the amplitudes of body-waves traveling through the
crust and
short-period surface waves guided through the top five to ten
kilometers of
crust. The body-waves geometrically spread at a super-spherical
rate rather
than the expected cylindrical spreading. The high rate of geometric
spreading is due to the effects of dispersion and leakage from
the crust
into the uppermost mantle. Surface waves spread in a cylindrical
manner as
predicted by theory. Dispersion has little effect on their
amplitudes.
Station site gains and corrections to the event magnitudes are
small for
both the inversions. Regional seismic attenuation variations are
associated
with the ocean-continent transition and surface rock type. The
water layer
creates high attenuation. Crystalline intrusive or volcanic rocks
show
little attenuation while active basin and fold belts show high
attenuation.
Data from the International Seismological Centre are from
long-period
surface waves that cover most of the planet. They are primarily
influenced
by attenuation structure in the crust but little affected by crustal
thickness. As with the Chinese surface wave data, they show
nearly perfect
cylindrical spreading and relatively small station site gains.
High seismic
attenuation occurs in subduction zones, ocean ridges, and
sediments. Cratons
and igneous terrains have little attenuation.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.TS4CF.B1.1