मंगलवार, 28 अप्रैल 2015

What is an earthquake?What causes the after shocks?

Shaking causes aftershocks



  1. Earthquake Facts and Statistics

    earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/eqarchives/year/eqstats.php

    Jan 13, 2015 - The USGS estimates that several million earthquakes occur in the world each year. Many go undetected because they hit remote areas or have very small magnitudes. The NEIC now locates about 50 earthquakes each day, or about 20,000 a year.
















Geophysicists in the US have found that the "aftershocks" produced by earthquakes are triggered by "dynamic" seismic waves from the main shock rather than changes in stress in nearby faults brought about by the rearrangement of the Earth's crust, as previously believed. Karen Felzer of the US Geological Survey and Emily Brodsky at the University of California at Santa Cruz obtained their results by analysing the aftershocks produced by thousands of small to medium-sized earthquakes that took place in Southern California over nearly two decades. The work could have implications in predicting where aftershocks occur (Nature 441 735).

Earthquakes occur as a result of the pressure that builds up between continental plates moving relative to one another in the Earth’s crust. These primary quakes then generate large numbers of aftershocks -- secondary shocks that can occur at some distance from the earthquake's epicentre and also up to a day or two later. Until now, scientists believed that it was changes in the "static stress" brought about by an earthquake that was responsible for its aftershocks since it seemed that only this mechanism could generate aftershocks that take place significantly after the main quake. But Felzer and Brodsky have concluded this is not the case.

The researchers looked at data on the precise locations of thousands of magnitude 2 to 6 earthquakes that occurred in Southern California between 1984 and 2002. They found that the number of aftershocks drops off steeply with increasing distance from the main shock, up to a distance of 50km. More precisely, they found that the frequency of aftershocks decays with distance as a single inverse power law with an exponent of around -1.35. They say this smooth trend means a single triggering process operates over the entire range, and that because static stress is negligible at distances approaching 50 km "dynamic stress" must be the culprit. They also point out that seismic waves also decay quickly with distance following a power-law relation.


The results could also have implications for predicting where aftershocks will occur once an earthquake has started say the researchers: "One of the key predictions from our studies is that the probability of having an aftershock is proportional to the amplitude of the shaking," explains Brodsky. "So if you know the amplitude of the seismic waves coming in you can, in a probabilistic sense, predict whether or not there's going to be an aftershock at a given site."


Earthquake Physics: Why? Where? When?

What is an earthquake?


An earthquake is a shaking of the ground caused by the sudden breaking and movement of large sections (tectonic plates) of the earth's rocky outermost crust. The edges of the tectonic plates are marked by faults (or fractures). Most earthquakes occur along the fault lines when the plates slide past each other or collide against each other.


The shifting masses send out shock waves that may be powerful enough to 

alter the surface of the Earth, thrusting up cliffs and opening great cracks in the ground and

  • cause great damage ... collapse of buildings and other man-made structures, broken power and gas lines (and the consequent fire), landslides, snow avalanches, tsunamis (giant sea waves) and volcanic eruptions.
Image source: U.S. Geological Survey


Fault or fault plane = the surface where when two blocks of the earth suddenly slip past one another

Hypocenter = the location below the earth’s surface where the earthquake starts

Epicenter = the location on the surface of the earth directly above the hypocenter

Image source: U.S. Geological Su

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