[1] We estimated the changes in seismic velocity in the southern Tohoku district of Japan during the six-month period centered on the 11 March 2011 Tohoku-oki earth-quake, using scattered waves retrieved by autocorrelation of ambient seismic noise. The estimated velocity decrease after the earthquake, and after two large aftershocks in the study area, was as great as 1.5 % in the area nearest to the main-shock. The velocity changes displayed gradual healing. The spatial distribution of the velocity change showed a correla-tion with both the changes in static strain, derived from GPS records, and the peak particle velocity experienced during the three earthquakes, derived from strong-motion records. Therefore, our results show that velocity ...
Seismic velocity changes before and after large magnitude earthquakes carry information about damage...
[1] We apply seismic interferometry to strong-motion records to detect the near-surface (i.e., an up...
Abstract An earthquake of JMA magnitude 6.5 (foreshock) hit Kumamoto Prefecture, Japan, at 21:26 JST...
We estimated the changes in seismic velocity in the southern Tohoku district of Japan during the six...
International audienceStudies of mechanical responses of the Earth crust to large earthquakes can pr...
earthquake obtained from a dense nationwide seismic network Abstract The dense recordings of the K-N...
Abstract A large earthquake shock often drops the seismic velocity of the shallow ground. However, i...
The permanent Global Positioning System (GPS) array in Japan detected coseismic and postseimic defor...
International audienceWe use ambient-noise-based seismic monitoring to detect an anomalous seismic v...
Plate motions are governed by equilibrium between basal and edge forces. Great earthquakes may induc...
International audienceSeismic velocity changes before and after large-magnitude earthquakes carry in...
one of the largest in recent history. Ground motion caused by the seismicity around the time of the ...
The magnitude (MW) 9.0 Tohoku-Oki earthquake on 11 March 2011 was one of the largest in recent histo...
Seismic velocity changes before and after large magnitude earthquakes carry information about damage...
[1] We apply seismic interferometry to strong-motion records to detect the near-surface (i.e., an up...
Abstract An earthquake of JMA magnitude 6.5 (foreshock) hit Kumamoto Prefecture, Japan, at 21:26 JST...
We estimated the changes in seismic velocity in the southern Tohoku district of Japan during the six...
International audienceStudies of mechanical responses of the Earth crust to large earthquakes can pr...
earthquake obtained from a dense nationwide seismic network Abstract The dense recordings of the K-N...
Abstract A large earthquake shock often drops the seismic velocity of the shallow ground. However, i...
The permanent Global Positioning System (GPS) array in Japan detected coseismic and postseimic defor...
International audienceWe use ambient-noise-based seismic monitoring to detect an anomalous seismic v...
Plate motions are governed by equilibrium between basal and edge forces. Great earthquakes may induc...
International audienceSeismic velocity changes before and after large-magnitude earthquakes carry in...
one of the largest in recent history. Ground motion caused by the seismicity around the time of the ...
The magnitude (MW) 9.0 Tohoku-Oki earthquake on 11 March 2011 was one of the largest in recent histo...
Seismic velocity changes before and after large magnitude earthquakes carry information about damage...
[1] We apply seismic interferometry to strong-motion records to detect the near-surface (i.e., an up...
Abstract An earthquake of JMA magnitude 6.5 (foreshock) hit Kumamoto Prefecture, Japan, at 21:26 JST...