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Shengji Wei, Sidao Ni, Xianjie Zha, Zhenjie Wang, Don Helmberger. 2011: Source model of the 11th July 2004 Zhongba earthquake revealed from the joint inversion of InSAR and seismological data. Earthquake Science, 24(2): 207-220. DOI: 10.1007/s11589-010-0785-8
Citation: Shengji Wei, Sidao Ni, Xianjie Zha, Zhenjie Wang, Don Helmberger. 2011: Source model of the 11th July 2004 Zhongba earthquake revealed from the joint inversion of InSAR and seismological data. Earthquake Science, 24(2): 207-220. DOI: 10.1007/s11589-010-0785-8

Source model of the 11th July 2004 Zhongba earthquake revealed from the joint inversion of InSAR and seismological data

  • We use interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) and broadband seismic waveform data to estimate a source model of the 11th July, 2004 <i<M</i<<sub<W</sub<6.2 Zhongba earthquake, Tibet of China. This event occurred within the seismically active zone of southwestern Tibetan Plateau where the east-west extension of the upper crust is observed. Because of limitations in one pair of InSAR data available, there are trade-offs among centroid depth, rupture area and amount of slip. Available seismic data tightly constrain the focal mechanism and centroid depth of the earthquake but not the horizontal location. Together, two complementary data sets can be used to identify the actual fault plane, better constrain the slip model and event location. We first use regional seismic waveform to estimate point source mechanism, then InSAR data is used to obtain better location. Finally, a joint inversion of teleseismic P-waves and InSAR data is performed to obtain a distributed model. Our preferred point source mechanism indicates a seismic moment of ~2.2×10<sup<18</sup< Ndm (~<i<M</i<<sub<W</sub<6.2), a fault plane solution of 171° (342°)/42°(48°)/-83°(-97°), corresponding to strike/dip/rake, and a depth of 11 km. The fault plane with strike of 171° and dip of 42° is identified as the ruptured fault with the aid of InSAR data. The preferred source model features compact area of slips between depth of 5-11 km and 10 km along strike with maximum slip amplitude of about 1.5 m.
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