The early postseismic phase of Tohoku-Oki earthquake (2011) from kinematics solutions: implication for subduction interface dynamics
- 1LGLTPE, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, France
- 2Géosciences Montpellier, Université de Montpellier, France
- 3ISTerre, Université Grenoble Alpes, France
- 4Géoazur, Université Côte d’Azur, France
Earthquakes are usually followed by a postseismic phase where the stresses induced by the earthquakes are relaxed. It is a combination of different processes among which aseismic slip on the fault zone (called afterslip), viscoelastic deformation of the surrounding material, poroelastic relaxation and aftershocks. However, little work has been done at the transition from the co- to the postseismic phase, and the physical processes involved.
We study the 2011 Mw 9.0 Tohoku-Oki earthquake, one of the largest and most instrumented recent earthquakes, using GEONET GPS data. We focus on the few minutes to the first month following the mainshock, a period dominated by afterslip.
Based on the method developed by Twardzik et al. (2019), we process 30-s kinematic position time series and we use it to characterize the fast displacements rates that typically occur during the early stages of the postseismic phase. We quantify precisely the co-seismic offset of the mainshock, without including early afterslip, and we also characterize the co-seismic offset of the Mw 7.9 Ibaraki-Oki aftershock, which occurred 30 minutes after the mainshock. We analyze the spatial distribution of the co-seismic offsets for both earthquakes. We also use signal induced by the postseismic phase over different time windows to investigate the spatio-temporal evolution of the postseismic slip. We determine the redistribution of stresses to estimate the regional influence of the mainshock and aftershock on postseismic slip.
From a detailed characterization of the first month of postseismic kinematic time series, we find that the best-fitting law is given by an Omori-like decay. The displacement rate is of the type v0/(t+c)p with spatial variation for the initial velocity v0 and for the time constant c. We find a consistent estimate of the p-value close to 0.7 over most of the studied area, apart from a small region close to the aftershock location where higher p values (p~1) are observed. This p value of 0.7 shows that the evolution of the Tohoku-Oki early afterslip is not logarithmic. We discuss about the implications of these observations in terms of subduction interface dynamics and rheology. We also discuss about the different time-scales involved in the relaxation, and how this model, established for the early postseismic phase over one month, performs over longer time scales (by comparison with daily time series lasting several years).
Twardzik Cedric, Mathilde Vergnolle, Anthony Sladen and Antonio Avallone (2019), doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-39038-z
Keywords: Early Postseismic, Afterslip, GPS, Kinematic, Omori Law
How to cite: Periollat, A., Radiguet, M., Weiss, J., Twardzik, C., Cotte, N., Marill, L., and Socquet, A.: The early postseismic phase of Tohoku-Oki earthquake (2011) from kinematics solutions: implication for subduction interface dynamics, EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-13761, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-13761, 2023.