image: Figure 1. (A) The distributions of tectonic units and earthquakes. (B) The triangles indicate positions of the seismometers. Orange triangles represent Group 1 stations situated in proximity to the fault zone. Purple and light blue triangles represent Group 2 and Group 3 stations, respectively, located farther from the fault zone. (C) is a schematic illustration depicting the fault fracture zone and the associated local geological maps.
Credit: ©Science China Press
This study was led by Prof. Huajian Yao from the University of Science and Technology of China. The team has used a dense array along the Anninghe fault zone in the southeastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau to analyze temporal seismic velocity changes (Figure 1). Using seismic interferometry techniques on continuous ambient noise data, they monitored temporal variations in seismic velocity in the Anninghe fault zone.
Their findings reveal clear periodic patterns in seismic velocity changes on daily, semi-daily, and monthly timescales (Figure 2, C-F), with these variations being most pronounced within the fault zone. Comparing these results with theoretical tidal strain models, the researchers observed strong correlations across all three timescales (Figure 2, D-F), indicating that tidal forces are a primary driver of these temporal fluctuations.
Further analysis using a spectral ratio method from teleseismic waveforms showed that the fault fracture zone exhibited significantly higher spectral ratio values (higher amplification) than surrounding areas, indicating a higher degree of subsurface fracturing (Figure 2B). Tidal forces affect seismic velocity by causing tiny underground fractures to open and close periodically—velocity decreasing when fractures open while increasing when they close. Due to its highly damaged nature, the fault fracture zone is particularly sensitive to these tidal influences (Figure 3).
This study, utilizing an ambient noise-based monitoring approach, provides new insights into how tidal forces impact fault systems. It offers valuable information for understanding fault dynamics, earthquake nucleation processes, and seismic hazards.
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See the article:
Pronounced temporal velocity variations within the fault fracture zone in response to Earth tide modes
https://doi.org/10.1093/nsr/nwaf023
Journal
National Science Review