2006
DOI: 10.1038/nature04799
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Decay of aftershock density with distance indicates triggering by dynamic stress

Abstract: The majority of earthquakes are aftershocks, yet aftershock physics is not well understood. Many studies suggest that static stress changes trigger aftershocks, but recent work suggests that shaking (dynamic stresses) may also play a role. Here we measure the decay of aftershocks as a function of distance from magnitude 2-6 mainshocks in order to clarify the aftershock triggering process. We find that for short times after the mainshock, when low background seismicity rates allow for good aftershock detection,… Show more

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Cited by 347 publications
(343 citation statements)
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“…To compare our results to those of Felzer and Brodsky [2006] and Richards-Dinger et al (unpublished), we compute the linear density, still for the same intervals of mainshock magnitude and time delays, as f ij (r k ≤ r < r k+1 ) = l ijk V ik r kþ1 Àr k . This is done for the four runs of our MISD algorithm, corresponding to the four combinations of (1) dV ik computed as geometrical Euclidean shell volumes, or as the number of unconditioned earthquakes in these volumes, and (2) l 0 = 0 or 10 −3 per km 3 and day, which for both dV ik sets gives a 53% proportion of background earthquakes (see section 3).…”
Section: Estimating the Linear Densitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…To compare our results to those of Felzer and Brodsky [2006] and Richards-Dinger et al (unpublished), we compute the linear density, still for the same intervals of mainshock magnitude and time delays, as f ij (r k ≤ r < r k+1 ) = l ijk V ik r kþ1 Àr k . This is done for the four runs of our MISD algorithm, corresponding to the four combinations of (1) dV ik computed as geometrical Euclidean shell volumes, or as the number of unconditioned earthquakes in these volumes, and (2) l 0 = 0 or 10 −3 per km 3 and day, which for both dV ik sets gives a 53% proportion of background earthquakes (see section 3).…”
Section: Estimating the Linear Densitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, we test and compare the results of Felzer and Brodsky [2006] to ours by performing their analysis with different sets of (declustering) parameters. We recall that, with their approach, an earthquake is not considered as a mainshock if there exists a larger earthquake within a radius L that occurred less than T 1 before or T 2 after it.…”
Section: Comparison With the Analysis Of Felzer And Brodsky [2006]mentioning
confidence: 99%
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