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Observation of far-field Mach waves generated by the 2001 Kokoxili supershear earthquake
Vallee M., Dunham E.M.
Geophysical Research Letters 39 (2012) L05311 - http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00682551
Article in peer-reviewed journal
Sciences of the Universe/Earth Sciences
Observation of far-field Mach waves generated by the 2001 Kokoxili supershear earthquake
M. Vallee 1, E.M. Dunham 2
1:  Géoazur (GEOAZUR)
http://geoazur.oca.eu
Université Nice Sophia Antipolis [UNS] – CNRS : UMR7329 – Institut de recherche pour le développement [IRD] – Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur – INSU – Université Pierre et Marie Curie [UPMC] - Paris VI
Bât 1, 250 rue Albert Einstein Les Lucioles 1, Sophia Antipolis 06560 VALBONNE
France
2:  Institute for Computational and Mathematical Engineering (iCME)
http://icme.stanford.edu/
Stanford University
Huang Building 475 Via Ortega Stanford University Stanford, CA 94305-4042
United States
Regional surface wave observations offer a powerful tool for determining source properties of large earthquakes, especially rupture velocity. Supershear ruptures, being faster than surface wave phase velocities, create far-field surface wave Mach cones along which waves from all sections of the fault arrive simultaneously and, over a sufficiently narrow frequency band, in phase. We present the first observation of far-field Mach waves from the major Kokoxili earthquake (Tibet, 2001/11/14, Mw 7.9) and confirm that ground motion amplitudes are indeed enhanced on the Mach cone. Theory predicts that on the Mach cone, bandpassed surface wave seismograms from a large supershear rupture will be identical to those from much smaller events with similar focal mechanisms, with an amplitude ratio equal to the ratio of the seismic moments of the two events. Cross-correlation of 15-25 s Love waves from the Kokoxili event with those from a much smaller (Mw 5) foreshock indicates a high degree of similarity (correlation coefficients ranging from 0.8 to 0.95) in waveforms recorded at stations near the far-field Mach cone. This similarity vanishes away from the Mach cone. These observations provide further evidence for supershear propagation of the Kokoxili rupture, and demonstrate how this simple waveform correlation procedure can be used to identify supershear ruptures.
English

Geophysical Research Letters (Geophys. Res. Lett.)
Publisher American Geophysical Union (AGU)
ISSN 0094-8276 
international
2012-03-14
39
L05311