- 1State Key laboratory of earthquake Dynamics and Forecasting, institute of Geology, china earthquake Administration (zeyanzhao@ies.ac.cn)
- 2School of earth and Space Sciences, Peking University (lian.xue@pku.edu.cn)
- 3State Key laboratory of earthquake Dynamics and Forecasting, Peking University
- 4Department of earth and Planetary Science, University of california, Berkeley
- 5Institute of earth Sciences, University of iceland
- 6Department of earth and Planetary Science, the University of tokyo
The occurrence of seismic events can be modulated by external periodic stress perturbations, such as daily tidal stress and annual hydrological stress. Such periodic modulations are crucial for understanding earthquake triggering, yet their underlying physical mechanisms are not fully understood. Here, we find that ordinary earthquakes (OEs) and low-frequency earthquakes (LFEs) on the Central San Andreas Fault (CSAF) are more sensitive to the long-period hydrological and the short-period tidal loadings, respectively. These different frequency-dependent modulations suggest pore fluid diffusion during the noninstantaneous earthquake nucleation and confirm different nucleation times of OEs and LFEs. We constrain the depth-varying physical properties of the CSAF and reveal that fluid content distribution and loading conditions fundamentally control slow-to-fast fault slip behaviors. Our study provides an alternative perspective to understand earthquake nucleation by using the information in periodic seismicity modulations, which can be applicable to subduction zones where similar slip behavior transitions occur.
How to cite: Zhao, Z., Xue, L., Bürgmann, R., Heimisson, E. R., Lu, W., and Yue, H.: Tidal and hydrological seismicity modulations reveal pore fluid diffusion during earthquake nucleation, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-21919, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-21919, 2026.