Location

Location ANSS

2023/03/22 14:34:05 58.189 -137.358 16.6 3.9 Alaska

Focal Mechanism

 USGS/SLU Moment Tensor Solution
 ENS  2023/03/22 14:34:05:0  58.19 -137.36  16.6 3.9 Alaska
 
 Stations used:
   AK.BARN AK.BESE AK.R32K AK.S31K AK.U33K AT.SIT AT.SKAG 
   CN.WHY US.WRAK 
 
 Filtering commands used:
   cut o DIST/3.3 -40 o DIST/3.3 +50
   rtr
   taper w 0.1
   hp c 0.03 n 3 
   lp c 0.07 n 3 
   br c 0.12 0.25 n 4 p 2
 
 Best Fitting Double Couple
  Mo = 3.76e+21 dyne-cm
  Mw = 3.65 
  Z  = 19 km
  Plane   Strike  Dip  Rake
   NP1      152    77   149
   NP2      250    60    15
  Principal Axes:
   Axis    Value   Plunge  Azimuth
    T   3.76e+21     31     107
    N   0.00e+00     57     312
    P  -3.76e+21     11     204

 Moment Tensor: (dyne-cm)
    Component   Value
       Mxx    -2.76e+21
       Mxy    -2.14e+21
       Mxz     1.64e+20
       Myy     1.92e+21
       Myz     1.87e+21
       Mzz     8.42e+20
                                                     
                                                     
                                                     
                                                     
                     --------------                  
                 #---------------------              
              #####-----------------------           
             ######------------------------          
           #########-------------------------        
          ##########--------------------------       
         ############--------################--      
        #############---########################     
        ############--##########################     
       ##########------##########################    
       #######----------#########################    
       ######------------########################    
       ####---------------##############   ######    
        ##-----------------############# T #####     
        #-------------------############   #####     
         --------------------##################      
          --------------------################       
           ---------------------#############        
             --------------------##########          
              -----   -------------#######           
                 -- P ---------------##              
                      -------------                  
                                                     
                                                     
                                                     
 Global CMT Convention Moment Tensor:
      R          T          P
  8.42e+20   1.64e+20  -1.87e+21 
  1.64e+20  -2.76e+21   2.14e+21 
 -1.87e+21   2.14e+21   1.92e+21 


Details of the solution is found at

http://www.eas.slu.edu/eqc/eqc_mt/MECH.NA/20230322143405/index.html
        

Preferred Solution

The preferred solution from an analysis of the surface-wave spectral amplitude radiation pattern, waveform inversion and first motion observations is

      STK = 250
      DIP = 60
     RAKE = 15
       MW = 3.65
       HS = 19.0

The NDK file is 20230322143405.ndk The waveform inversion is preferred.

Moment Tensor Comparison

The following compares this source inversion to others
SLU
 USGS/SLU Moment Tensor Solution
 ENS  2023/03/22 14:34:05:0  58.19 -137.36  16.6 3.9 Alaska
 
 Stations used:
   AK.BARN AK.BESE AK.R32K AK.S31K AK.U33K AT.SIT AT.SKAG 
   CN.WHY US.WRAK 
 
 Filtering commands used:
   cut o DIST/3.3 -40 o DIST/3.3 +50
   rtr
   taper w 0.1
   hp c 0.03 n 3 
   lp c 0.07 n 3 
   br c 0.12 0.25 n 4 p 2
 
 Best Fitting Double Couple
  Mo = 3.76e+21 dyne-cm
  Mw = 3.65 
  Z  = 19 km
  Plane   Strike  Dip  Rake
   NP1      152    77   149
   NP2      250    60    15
  Principal Axes:
   Axis    Value   Plunge  Azimuth
    T   3.76e+21     31     107
    N   0.00e+00     57     312
    P  -3.76e+21     11     204

 Moment Tensor: (dyne-cm)
    Component   Value
       Mxx    -2.76e+21
       Mxy    -2.14e+21
       Mxz     1.64e+20
       Myy     1.92e+21
       Myz     1.87e+21
       Mzz     8.42e+20
                                                     
                                                     
                                                     
                                                     
                     --------------                  
                 #---------------------              
              #####-----------------------           
             ######------------------------          
           #########-------------------------        
          ##########--------------------------       
         ############--------################--      
        #############---########################     
        ############--##########################     
       ##########------##########################    
       #######----------#########################    
       ######------------########################    
       ####---------------##############   ######    
        ##-----------------############# T #####     
        #-------------------############   #####     
         --------------------##################      
          --------------------################       
           ---------------------#############        
             --------------------##########          
              -----   -------------#######           
                 -- P ---------------##              
                      -------------                  
                                                     
                                                     
                                                     
 Global CMT Convention Moment Tensor:
      R          T          P
  8.42e+20   1.64e+20  -1.87e+21 
  1.64e+20  -2.76e+21   2.14e+21 
 -1.87e+21   2.14e+21   1.92e+21 


Details of the solution is found at

http://www.eas.slu.edu/eqc/eqc_mt/MECH.NA/20230322143405/index.html
	

Magnitudes

ML Magnitude


(a) ML computed using the IASPEI formula for Horizontal components; (b) ML residuals computed using a modified IASPEI formula that accounts for path specific attenuation; the values used for the trimmed mean are indicated. The ML relation used for each figure is given at the bottom of each plot.


(a) ML computed using the IASPEI formula for Vertical components (research); (b) ML residuals computed using a modified IASPEI formula that accounts for path specific attenuation; the values used for the trimmed mean are indicated. The ML relation used for each figure is given at the bottom of each plot.

Context

The next figure presents the focal mechanism for this earthquake (red) in the context of other events (blue) in the SLU Moment Tensor Catalog which are within ± 0.5 degrees of the new event. This comparison is shown in the left panel of the figure. The right panel shows the inferred direction of maximum compressive stress and the type of faulting (green is strike-slip, red is normal, blue is thrust; oblique is shown by a combination of colors).

Waveform Inversion using wvfgrd96

The focal mechanism was determined using broadband seismic waveforms. The location of the event and the and stations used for the waveform inversion are shown in the next figure.
Location of broadband stations used for waveform inversion

The program wvfgrd96 was used with good traces observed at short distance to determine the focal mechanism, depth and seismic moment. This technique requires a high quality signal and well determined velocity model for the Green functions. To the extent that these are the quality data, this type of mechanism should be preferred over the radiation pattern technique which requires the separate step of defining the pressure and tension quadrants and the correct strike.

The observed and predicted traces are filtered using the following gsac commands:

cut o DIST/3.3 -40 o DIST/3.3 +50
rtr
taper w 0.1
hp c 0.03 n 3 
lp c 0.07 n 3 
br c 0.12 0.25 n 4 p 2
The results of this grid search are as follow:

           DEPTH  STK   DIP  RAKE   MW    FIT
WVFGRD96    1.0    50    65   -30   3.26 0.4075
WVFGRD96    2.0    50    65   -40   3.35 0.4668
WVFGRD96    3.0    50    65   -40   3.40 0.4563
WVFGRD96    4.0   250    35   -10   3.50 0.4800
WVFGRD96    5.0   250    35   -15   3.51 0.5350
WVFGRD96    6.0   250    40   -15   3.51 0.5665
WVFGRD96    7.0   250    45   -15   3.51 0.5841
WVFGRD96    8.0   250    40   -15   3.56 0.5994
WVFGRD96    9.0   250    45   -15   3.56 0.6074
WVFGRD96   10.0   255    50    -5   3.56 0.6148
WVFGRD96   11.0   255    50     0   3.56 0.6217
WVFGRD96   12.0   255    55     5   3.58 0.6294
WVFGRD96   13.0   250    55    10   3.58 0.6362
WVFGRD96   14.0   250    55    10   3.59 0.6424
WVFGRD96   15.0   250    55    10   3.60 0.6467
WVFGRD96   16.0   250    60    15   3.61 0.6510
WVFGRD96   17.0   250    60    15   3.62 0.6545
WVFGRD96   18.0   250    60    15   3.64 0.6562
WVFGRD96   19.0   250    60    15   3.65 0.6573
WVFGRD96   20.0   250    60    15   3.66 0.6564
WVFGRD96   21.0   245    60    10   3.67 0.6555
WVFGRD96   22.0   245    60    10   3.68 0.6537
WVFGRD96   23.0   245    60    10   3.69 0.6516
WVFGRD96   24.0   245    60    10   3.70 0.6480
WVFGRD96   25.0   245    60    10   3.71 0.6429
WVFGRD96   26.0   245    60    10   3.72 0.6372
WVFGRD96   27.0   245    60     5   3.72 0.6309
WVFGRD96   28.0   245    60     5   3.73 0.6239
WVFGRD96   29.0   245    60     5   3.74 0.6160

The best solution is

WVFGRD96   19.0   250    60    15   3.65 0.6573

The mechanism correspond to the best fit is
Figure 1. Waveform inversion focal mechanism

The best fit as a function of depth is given in the following figure:

Figure 2. Depth sensitivity for waveform mechanism

The comparison of the observed and predicted waveforms is given in the next figure. The red traces are the observed and the blue are the predicted. Each observed-predicted component is plotted to the same scale and peak amplitudes are indicated by the numbers to the left of each trace. A pair of numbers is given in black at the right of each predicted traces. The upper number it the time shift required for maximum correlation between the observed and predicted traces. This time shift is required because the synthetics are not computed at exactly the same distance as the observed and because the velocity model used in the predictions may not be perfect. A positive time shift indicates that the prediction is too fast and should be delayed to match the observed trace (shift to the right in this figure). A negative value indicates that the prediction is too slow. The lower number gives the percentage of variance reduction to characterize the individual goodness of fit (100% indicates a perfect fit).

The bandpass filter used in the processing and for the display was

cut o DIST/3.3 -40 o DIST/3.3 +50
rtr
taper w 0.1
hp c 0.03 n 3 
lp c 0.07 n 3 
br c 0.12 0.25 n 4 p 2
Figure 3. Waveform comparison for selected depth. Red: observed; Blue - predicted. The time shift with respect to the model prediction is indicated. The percent of fit is also indicated. The time scale is based on the last trace plotted. It is not used to represent travel time or absolute time, but rather to indicate the number of seconds plotted. If there is not a trace directly above the scale, then a default, meaningless scale is plotted.
Focal mechanism sensitivity at the preferred depth. The red color indicates a very good fit to thewavefroms. Each solution is plotted as a vector at a given value of strike and dip with the angle of the vector representing the rake angle, measured, with respect to the upward vertical (N) in the figure.

A check on the assumed source location is possible by looking at the time shifts between the observed and predicted traces. The time shifts for waveform matching arise for several reasons:

Assuming only a mislocation, the time shifts are fit to a functional form:

 Time_shift = A + B cos Azimuth + C Sin Azimuth

The time shifts for this inversion lead to the next figure:

The derived shift in origin time and epicentral coordinates are given at the bottom of the figure.

Discussion

Acknowledgements

Thanks also to the many seismic network operators whose dedication make this effort possible: University of Nevada Reno, University of Alaska, University of Washington, Oregon State University, University of Utah, Montana Bureau of Mines, UC Berkely, Caltech, UC San Diego, Saint Louis University, University of Memphis, Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory, the Oklahoma Geological Survey, TexNet, the Iris stations, the Transportable Array of EarthScope and other networks.

Velocity Model

The WUS.model used for the waveform synthetic seismograms and for the surface wave eigenfunctions and dispersion is as follows:

MODEL.01
Model after     8 iterations
ISOTROPIC
KGS
FLAT EARTH
1-D
CONSTANT VELOCITY
LINE08
LINE09
LINE10
LINE11
      H(KM)   VP(KM/S)   VS(KM/S) RHO(GM/CC)         QP         QS       ETAP       ETAS      FREFP      FREFS
     1.9000     3.4065     2.0089     2.2150  0.302E-02  0.679E-02   0.00       0.00       1.00       1.00    
     6.1000     5.5445     3.2953     2.6089  0.349E-02  0.784E-02   0.00       0.00       1.00       1.00    
    13.0000     6.2708     3.7396     2.7812  0.212E-02  0.476E-02   0.00       0.00       1.00       1.00    
    19.0000     6.4075     3.7680     2.8223  0.111E-02  0.249E-02   0.00       0.00       1.00       1.00    
     0.0000     7.9000     4.6200     3.2760  0.164E-10  0.370E-10   0.00       0.00       1.00       1.00    

Quality Control

Here we tabulate the reasons for not using certain digital data sets

The following stations did not have a valid response files:

Last Changed Wed Mar 22 09:53:22 CDT 2023