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Guoze Zhao, Yan Zhan, Lifeng Wang, Jijun Wang, Ji Tang, Qibin Xiao, Xiaobin Chen. 2009: Electromagnetic anomaly before earthquakes measured by electromagnetic experiments. Earthquake Science, 22(4): 395-402. DOI: 10.1007/s11589-009-0395-5
Citation: Guoze Zhao, Yan Zhan, Lifeng Wang, Jijun Wang, Ji Tang, Qibin Xiao, Xiaobin Chen. 2009: Electromagnetic anomaly before earthquakes measured by electromagnetic experiments. Earthquake Science, 22(4): 395-402. DOI: 10.1007/s11589-009-0395-5

Electromagnetic anomaly before earthquakes measured by electromagnetic experiments

  • Three experiments are carried out for earthquake monitoring using electromagnetic (EM) methods in recent years. Some earthquakes occurred in chance of the measurement time period for each experiment and the anomalies were recorded before the shocks. The observation at a site 20 km away from the epicenter of Zhangbei MS6.2 earthquake in 1998 shows that the apparent resistivity decreases in the strike direction before and/or during the earthquake and the resistivity increases in the decline direction. This anomalous variation in apparent resistivity accounts for about 20%. The apparent resistivities at a site in the epicentral area decrease in the strike and decline directions before and/or during the earthquake and increase after shocks. The experiments using artificial electromagnetic signals with super low frequency carried out in 1999 show that the resolution and stability of electric and magnetic spectra are improved. The spectra of electric and magnetic fields and apparent resistivity at the Baodi station began to anomalously change two days before the Qian'an earthquake with 120 km distant to the station. The anomalous variation of electric and magnetic spectra is about twice as great as normal variation and the apparent resistivity changes by about 20%. The measurements in active seismic area of Yunnan province in the year 2005 indicate that the electric and magnetic spectra anomalously change by one order before the Taoyuan earthquake about 100 km away from the observatories. But the measurements at the sites in Beijing area 2 000 km away from the epicenter do not show any anomaly.
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