Moment‐Duration Scaling of Low‐Frequency Earthquakes in Guerrero, Mexico


Title

Moment‐Duration Scaling of Low‐Frequency Earthquakes in Guerrero, Mexico

Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Volume
125656682
Issue
8531
Date Published
Jan-08-2020
Publication Language
eng
Citation Key
3498
ISSN
2169-9313
Abstract

Low‐frequency earthquakes (LFEs) are detected within tremor, as small, repetitive, impulsive low‐frequency (1–8 Hz) signals. While the mechanism causing this depletion of the high‐frequency content of their signal is still debated, this feature may indicate that the source processes at the origin of LFEs are different from those for regular earthquakes. Key constraints on the LFE‐generating physical mechanisms can be obtained by establishing scaling laws between their seismic moment and source durations. Here we apply a simple spectral analysis method to the S waveforms of LFEs from Guerrero, Mexico, to measure their seismic moments and corner frequencies, a proxy to source duration. We find characteristic values of M0∼3×1012 N.m (Mw∼2.3) and fc∼3.0 Hz with the corner frequency very weakly dependent on the seismic moment. This moment‐duration scaling observed for Mexican LFEs is similar to one previously reported in Cascadia and is very different from the established one for regular earthquakes. This suggests that they could be generated by sources of nearly constant size with strongly varying intensities. LFEs do not exhibit the self‐similarity characteristic of regular earthquakes, suggesting that the physical mechanisms at their origin could be intrinsically different.

Short Title
J. Geophys. Res. Solid Earth