The magnitude 9.0 of the Sumatra mega-earthquake occurred on December 26, 2004 is the strongest in the world since the 1964 Alaska earthquake and the fourth since 1900. The earthquake happened on the interface of the India and Burma plates and triggered a massive tsunami that affected several countries throughout South and Southeast Asia. The rupture, estimated by the aftershock distribution, start from central Suma- tra northward for about 1200 kilometres. The source time function and the rupture process using 29 teleseismic broad-band data, provided by IRIS-DMC stations were analysed. The dataset was selected by mean of two criteria: data quality and azimuthal distribution. The rupture direction and velocity were determined from common pu...
The aim of this work is to infer the slip distribution and rupture velocity along the rupture zone ...
On 4 January 1907, an earthquake occurred off the west coast of Sumatra, Indonesia, with an instrume...
The rupture processes of two sequentialearthquakes have been inverted from teleseismic data. The fir...
The Sumatra mega-earthquake with magnitude 9.3 of 26 December 2004 was the strongest earthquake in t...
The Sumatra mega-earthquake of 26 December 2004 (Mw=9.3) was the strongest earthquake in the world s...
We infer the slip distribution and average rupture velocity of the magnitude MW 8.4 September 12, 20...
The two largest earthquakes of the past 40 years ruptured a 1600-kilometer-long portion of the fault...
We infer the slip distribution and average rupture velocity of the magnitude MW 8.4 September 12, 2...
The 2004 Great Sumatra-Andaman earthquake had an average source duration of about 500 sec. and a ru...
We analyze the rupture history of this earthquake, the largest thrust earthquake since 1977, primari...
International audienceTrench-parallel thrust faults verging both landward and seaward were mapped in...
The Mentawai segment of the Sumatra subduction zone is locked and likely to produce a large earthqua...
The aim of this work is to infer the slip distribution and rupture velocity along the rupture zone ...
On 4 January 1907, an earthquake occurred off the west coast of Sumatra, Indonesia, with an instrume...
The rupture processes of two sequentialearthquakes have been inverted from teleseismic data. The fir...
The Sumatra mega-earthquake with magnitude 9.3 of 26 December 2004 was the strongest earthquake in t...
The Sumatra mega-earthquake of 26 December 2004 (Mw=9.3) was the strongest earthquake in the world s...
We infer the slip distribution and average rupture velocity of the magnitude MW 8.4 September 12, 20...
The two largest earthquakes of the past 40 years ruptured a 1600-kilometer-long portion of the fault...
We infer the slip distribution and average rupture velocity of the magnitude MW 8.4 September 12, 2...
The 2004 Great Sumatra-Andaman earthquake had an average source duration of about 500 sec. and a ru...
We analyze the rupture history of this earthquake, the largest thrust earthquake since 1977, primari...
International audienceTrench-parallel thrust faults verging both landward and seaward were mapped in...
The Mentawai segment of the Sumatra subduction zone is locked and likely to produce a large earthqua...
The aim of this work is to infer the slip distribution and rupture velocity along the rupture zone ...
On 4 January 1907, an earthquake occurred off the west coast of Sumatra, Indonesia, with an instrume...
The rupture processes of two sequentialearthquakes have been inverted from teleseismic data. The fir...