TY - JOUR
T1 - Geodetic constraints on afterslip characteristics following the March 9, 2011, Sanriku-oki earthquake, Japan
AU - Ohta, Yusaku
AU - Hino, Ryota
AU - Inazu, Daisuke
AU - Ohzono, Mako
AU - Ito, Yoshihiro
AU - Mishina, Masaaki
AU - Iinuma, Takeshi
AU - Nakajima, Junichi
AU - Osada, Yukihito
AU - Suzuki, Kensuke
AU - Fujimoto, Hiromi
AU - Tachibana, Kenji
AU - Demachi, Tomotsugu
AU - Miura, Satoshi
PY - 2012/8/28
Y1 - 2012/8/28
N2 - A magnitude 7.3 foreshock occurred at the subducting Pacific plate interface on March 9, 2011, 51 h before the magnitude 9.0 Tohoku earthquake off the Pacific coast of Japan. We propose a coseismic and postseismic afterslip model of the magnitude 7.3 event based on a global positioning system network and ocean bottom pressure gauge sites. The estimated coseismic slip and afterslip areas show complementary spatial distributions; the afterslip distribution is located up-dip of the coseismic slip for the foreshock and northward of hypocenter of the Tohoku earthquake. The slip amount for the afterslip is roughly consistent with that determined by repeating earthquake analysis carried out in a previous study. The estimated moment release for the afterslip reached magnitude 6.8, even within a short time period of 51h. A volumetric strainmeter time series also suggests that this event advanced with a rapid decay time constant compared with other typical large earthquakes.
AB - A magnitude 7.3 foreshock occurred at the subducting Pacific plate interface on March 9, 2011, 51 h before the magnitude 9.0 Tohoku earthquake off the Pacific coast of Japan. We propose a coseismic and postseismic afterslip model of the magnitude 7.3 event based on a global positioning system network and ocean bottom pressure gauge sites. The estimated coseismic slip and afterslip areas show complementary spatial distributions; the afterslip distribution is located up-dip of the coseismic slip for the foreshock and northward of hypocenter of the Tohoku earthquake. The slip amount for the afterslip is roughly consistent with that determined by repeating earthquake analysis carried out in a previous study. The estimated moment release for the afterslip reached magnitude 6.8, even within a short time period of 51h. A volumetric strainmeter time series also suggests that this event advanced with a rapid decay time constant compared with other typical large earthquakes.
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U2 - 10.1029/2012GL052430
DO - 10.1029/2012GL052430
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84865489831
SN - 0094-8276
VL - 39
JO - Geophysical Research Letters
JF - Geophysical Research Letters
IS - 16
M1 - L16304
ER -