Earthquake location derived from P, PmP and S waves : feasibility and problems

In this research, we explore variety of methods to locate earthquakes in Kyushu Japan and Southern California. Locating earthquakes to identify a fault line, is one of the possible way to find a cause of an earthquake occurrence. Although an earthquake occurrence is inevitable and unpredictable i...

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Main Author: Cheng, Yau Wing
Other Authors: Tong Ping
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145289
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author Cheng, Yau Wing
author2 Tong Ping
author_facet Tong Ping
Cheng, Yau Wing
author_sort Cheng, Yau Wing
collection NTU
description In this research, we explore variety of methods to locate earthquakes in Kyushu Japan and Southern California. Locating earthquakes to identify a fault line, is one of the possible way to find a cause of an earthquake occurrence. Although an earthquake occurrence is inevitable and unpredictable in general, at least the scientist will know that sometime later, the similar earthquake will occur again somewhere within a fault line, and therefore need to plan and be prepared in advance to prevent similar casualties again. To find each earthquake location, at least 4 seismic stations locations and their corresponding phase arrival times should be known. In practice, there are usually more than 4 seismic stations for each earthquake and each phase arrival time is manually picked with some error, and hence requires to find the best fit approximation of each earthquake location. In this research thesis, we use Geiger's Method, and Grid Search and Fast Marching Method to locate earthquake. Overall, both Geiger's Method, and Grid Search and Fast Marching Method, are feasible for locating epicenter of earthquakes. However, for both methods, we need to be careful when locating earthquake depth. Because the earthquake depth estimate might be very uncertain and the error estimate must be checked.
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spelling ntu-10356/1452892023-02-28T23:49:20Z Earthquake location derived from P, PmP and S waves : feasibility and problems Cheng, Yau Wing Tong Ping School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences tongping@ntu.edu.sg Science::Mathematics In this research, we explore variety of methods to locate earthquakes in Kyushu Japan and Southern California. Locating earthquakes to identify a fault line, is one of the possible way to find a cause of an earthquake occurrence. Although an earthquake occurrence is inevitable and unpredictable in general, at least the scientist will know that sometime later, the similar earthquake will occur again somewhere within a fault line, and therefore need to plan and be prepared in advance to prevent similar casualties again. To find each earthquake location, at least 4 seismic stations locations and their corresponding phase arrival times should be known. In practice, there are usually more than 4 seismic stations for each earthquake and each phase arrival time is manually picked with some error, and hence requires to find the best fit approximation of each earthquake location. In this research thesis, we use Geiger's Method, and Grid Search and Fast Marching Method to locate earthquake. Overall, both Geiger's Method, and Grid Search and Fast Marching Method, are feasible for locating epicenter of earthquakes. However, for both methods, we need to be careful when locating earthquake depth. Because the earthquake depth estimate might be very uncertain and the error estimate must be checked. Master of Science 2020-12-16T08:36:41Z 2020-12-16T08:36:41Z 2020 Thesis-Master by Research Cheng, Y. W. (2020). Earthquake location derived from P, PmP and S waves : feasibility and problems. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145289 10.32657/10356/145289 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
spellingShingle Science::Mathematics
Cheng, Yau Wing
Earthquake location derived from P, PmP and S waves : feasibility and problems
title Earthquake location derived from P, PmP and S waves : feasibility and problems
title_full Earthquake location derived from P, PmP and S waves : feasibility and problems
title_fullStr Earthquake location derived from P, PmP and S waves : feasibility and problems
title_full_unstemmed Earthquake location derived from P, PmP and S waves : feasibility and problems
title_short Earthquake location derived from P, PmP and S waves : feasibility and problems
title_sort earthquake location derived from p pmp and s waves feasibility and problems
topic Science::Mathematics
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145289
work_keys_str_mv AT chengyauwing earthquakelocationderivedfromppmpandswavesfeasibilityandproblems