Abstract. A magnitude 7.5 earthquake occurred on 28 September 2018 at 10:02:43 UTC
near the city of Palu on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi. It was a
shallow, strike-slip earthquake with a rupture extending to a length of about
150 km and reaching the surface. Moreover, this earthquake was identified as
one of very few events having a super-shear rupture speed. Clear and long-lasting infrasound signatures related to this event were
observed by four infrasound arrays of the International Monitoring System of
the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization as well as by one
national infrasound station in Singapore. Although these infrasound stations
SING (Singapore), I39PW (Palau), I07AU (Australia), I40PG (Papua New Guinea)
and I30JP (Japan) are located at large distances of between 1800 and 4500 km
from the earthquake's epicentral region, the observed infrasound signals
associated with this event were intense, including both seismic and acoustic
arrivals. A detailed study of the event-related infrasound observations and the
potential infrasound generation mechanisms is presented, covering
range-dependent infrasound transmission loss and propagation modeling and
characterization of the atmospheric background conditions, as well as
identification of the regions of seismoacoustic activity by applying a back-projection method from the infrasound receivers to potential source regions.
This back projection of infrasonic arrivals allows one to estimate that the main
infrasound source region for the Sulawesi earthquake is related to the
extended rupture zone and the nearby topography. This estimation and a
comparison to other super-shear as well as large regional earthquakes
identify no clear connection between the earthquake's super-shear nature
and the strong infrasound emission.