The earthquake size distribution (b-value) is a significant factor to recognize the seismic activity, seismotectonic, and seismic hazard assessment. In the current work, the connection of the b-constant value with the focal depth and mechanism was studied. The effect of the study scale (global, regional and local) on the dependence of bvalue on the focal mechanisms was investigated. The database is quoted from the Global Centroid Moment Tensor catalog. The selected earthquakes are the shallow normal, reverse and strike-slip events. The completeness magnitude (Mc) is 5.3. The maximum likelihood method is utilized to compute the b-value. The obtained results show that the b-value is decreasing with depth to range 10-20 km, then increases to the depth of 40km. The turning point of b-value (increasing of b-value) locates at the depth of the transition brittle-ductile zone. Globally and regionally, low, moderate, and high b-values are associated with reverse, strike-slip, and normal focal mechanisms, respectively, while locally, the relation between b-values and focal mechanisms shows different association trends, such as low, moderate, and high b-values are associated with normal, strike-slip, and reverse focal mechanisms and so on.
CITATION STYLE
Al-Heety, E. A., & Mohammad, O. J. (2021). The reliance of the earthquake b-value on depth and focal mechanism. Iraqi Geological Journal, 54(1), 1–10. https://doi.org/10.46717/igj.54.1D.1Ms-2021-04-21
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