| May
22, 2005
New Method for Imaging Dec. 26 Indian
Ocean Earthquake Yields Unprecedented Results
Technique developed for detailing the longest event
ever recorded
could be used for future public warning and tsunami alert systems
By Mario Aguilera
The disastrous
Dec. 26, 2004, earthquake in the Indian Ocean that generated
an enormous tsunami and led to untold devastation for millions
of people was one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded.
Seismologists are using new methods to detail the processes
that unfolded during the event, known as the Sumatra-Andaman
earthquake.
Scientists at Scripps
Institution of Oceanography at UCSD, in collaboration with scientists
at UCLA, have developed a new method for imaging how the earth
ruptured during the quake, which is providing a fresh perspective
of the massive event. In this method, the scientists use the
first-arriving seismic waves generated by an earthquake to produce
detailed images within 30 minutes of an event, a development
that could have implications for public-warning and tsunami-alert
systems.
The
details are described by Scripps’ Miaki Ishii and Peter
Shearer and UCLA’s Heidi Houston, professor-in-residence
in UCLA’s Earth and Space Sciences department and John
Vidale, UCLA professor of Earth and Space Sciences, and interim
director of UCLA’s Institute of Geophysics and Planetary
Physics, in the May 22 online edition of the journal Nature.
The authors present
a method that traces seismic waves back to their original rupture
source. In the case of the Sumatra-Andaman event, they used
the Japanese Hi-Net array, consisting of about 700 high-quality
seismometers, as antennae to track the seismic sources.
“If you were
at a pond and dropped a pebble, you would see a ripple appear
in the water. If another person only saw the ripple, they could
still probably guess where you dropped the pebble by tracing
the rings back to the center. That’s exactly what we are
doing. We are looking at how the ring of seismic waves is approaching
the array to find out where the rupture is occurring,”
said Ishii, the Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Scholar at Scripps.
For the Dec. 26 event,
the scientists obtained a series of rupture points progressing
from south to north in the Sumatra-Andaman region. Called “back
projection,” the method is not unlike those used to find
sources of oil and gas and by astronomers to image distant galaxies.
“It’s similar
to some ideas that have been used in the past, but as far as
we know it’s the first time that it has been applied to
directly image the rupture of a large earthquake,” said
Shearer, a professor in the Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Institute
of Geophysics and Planetary Physics at Scripps.
The resulting images
from the Sumatra-Andaman event paint a detailed picture (see
video animation above right), starting at an epicenter just
west of northern Sumatra. A powerful burst of rupture energy
is seen 80 seconds later as the quake progresses northwest.
A second significant burst occurs after another 220 seconds,
west of the Car Nicobar region. The entire event lasts for about
eight minutes and ends at the northern Andaman archipelago.
The new findings also
show that the event extends father north than initially reported.
At 500 seconds and 1,300 kilometers, the Sumatra-Andaman event
is longer than the three other largest recorded earthquakes:
the 1957 Aleutian earthquake, the 1960 Chile earthquake and
the 1964 Alaskan earthquake.
“Our
model provides the most detailed view to date of rupture propagation
in a great earthquake,” Vidale said.
“The enormous
dimensions involved made this event the best candidate in decades
for an in-depth look at the rupture and slip in an earthquake,”
said Houston.
Because their method
capitalizes on an earthquake’s first-arriving seismic
energy, called “P waves,” the authors say their
model could be implemented in a real-time system in which an
accurate estimate of the length and duration of great earthquakes
could be obtained within 20 to 30 minutes of the earthquake
initiation.
The scientists note
that the method’s performance depends on the distance
of the seismic array from an earthquake.
“The existing
global seismic network could provide enough information to produce
useful results for earthquakes anywhere in the world,”
said Shearer. “This would give people a much faster idea
of the size and extent of large earthquakes. We are trying to
work with other scientists to develop ways that they could use
this method in a worldwide warning system.”
The study was supported
by the Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Foundation and the National
Science Foundation.
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark
(858) 534-3624
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