• Magnitude comparison distinguishes small

    From ScienceDaily@1337:3/111 to All on Tue Oct 13 21:31:10 2020
    Magnitude comparison distinguishes small earthquakes from chemical
    explosions in US west

    Date:
    October 13, 2020
    Source:
    Seismological Society of America
    Summary:
    By comparing two magnitude measurements for seismic events
    recorded locally, researchers can tell whether the event was a
    small earthquake or a single-fire buried chemical explosion.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    By comparing two magnitude measurements for seismic events recorded
    locally, researchers can tell whether the event was a small earthquake
    or a single-fire buried chemical explosion.


    ==========================================================================
    The findings, published in the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, give seismologists one more tool to monitor nuclear explosions, particularly low-yield explosions that are detected using seismic stations
    that are 150 kilometers (about 93 miles) or less from the explosion site.

    Seismologists use a variety of methods to distinguish earthquakes from explosions, such as analyzing the ratio of P waves (which compress rock
    in the same direction as a wave's movement) to S waves (which move rock perpendicular to the wave direction). However, methods like the P/S-wave
    ratio do not work as well for events of magnitude 3 or smaller, making
    it essential to develop other discrimination techniques, said University
    of Utah seismologist Keith Koper.

    Scientists have debated, for instance, whether a small seismic event
    that took place on 12 May 2010 in North Korea was a natural earthquake
    or an earthquake induced by a low-yield nuclear explosion.

    The new study looks at the difference between local magnitude (ML) and
    coda duration magnitude (MC) measurements. Local magnitude, sometimes
    referred to as Richter magnitude, estimates magnitude based on the
    maximum amplitude of seismic waves detected. Coda duration magnitude is
    based on the duration of a seismic wave train and the resulting length
    of the seismogram it produces.

    Koper and his students stumbled across the potential usefulness of
    this comparison in one of his graduate seminars about four years ago,
    as the students practiced programming and comparing different types
    of magnitudes. "It turned out that when you looked at these magnitude differences, there was a pattern," he said. "All these earthquakes in
    Utah that are associated with coal mining have a bigger coda magnitude,
    with seismograms longer than normal." Compared to naturally occurring earthquakes, seismic events caused by human activity tend to have a
    larger MC than ML, the researchers concluded in a 2016 paper. Very
    shallow seismic events have a larger MC than deeper buried events,
    they found, while noting that most human activities that would induce earthquakes take place at shallow depths in the crust, compared to the
    deeper origins of natural earthquakes.

    The findings suggested that ML-MC difference could be useful in detecting nuclear explosions at a local level, but the multiple detonations in a
    coal mining operation, scattered in space and time, produce a different
    seismic signature than the compact single shot of a nuclear explosion.

    To further test the discrimination method, the researchers searched for "explosions that were better proxies, compact, and not your typical
    industrial explosions," Koper said.

    In the BSSA study, Koper and colleagues applied the ML-MC difference to
    three experiments in the U.S. West that recorded data on local networks
    from buried single-fire explosions as well as natural earthquakes:
    the 2010 Bighorn Arch Seismic Experiment (BASE) in northern Wyoming,
    the imaging Magma Under St.

    Helens (iMUSH) experiment in Washington State from 2014 to 2016, and the
    Phase I explosions of the Source Physics Experiment (SPE) in Nevada from
    2011 to 2016.

    The method was able to successfully separate explosions from natural earthquakes in the data from all three sites, the researchers found,
    confirming that it would be potentially useful for identifying small underground nuclear explosions in places that are only covered by a
    local seismic network.

    Beyond explosion seismology, the method might also help identify and
    analyze other earthquakes that have shallow sources, including some
    earthquakes induced by human activities such as oil and gas recovery,
    Koper said.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    Seismological_Society_of_America. Note: Content may be edited for style
    and length.


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    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2020/10/201013124143.htm

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