Earthquake Early Warning (EEW) algorithms estimate the magnitude of an underway rupture from the first few seconds of the P-wave to allow hazard assessment and mitigation before the S-wave arrival. Many large subductionzone earthquakes initiate 50-150 km offshore, potentially allowing seafloor instruments sufficient time to identify large ruptures before the S-waves reach land. We tested an EEW algorithm using accelerograms recorded offshore Hokkaido in the region of the 2003 Mw 8.1 Tokachi-Oki earthquake and its aftershocks. A wavelet transform of the first ∼4 s of the P-wave concentrates information about earthquake magnitude from both waveform amplitude and frequency content. We find that wavelets with support of a few seconds provide discriminants for EEW that are both accurate enough to be useful and superior to peak acceleration or peak velocity. Additionally, we observe a scaling of wavelet coefficient magnitude above Mw 6.0 indicating that, at least for the mainshock (Mw 8. 1) and largest aftershock (Mw 7. 1), the final size of a rupture could have been estimated from the initial portion of the seismogram. Copyright 2008 by the American Geophysical Union.
CITATION STYLE
McGuire, J. J., Simons, F. J., & Collins, J. A. (2008). Analysis of seafloor seismograms of the 2003 Tokachi-Oki earthquake sequence for earthquake early warning. Geophysical Research Letters, 35(14). https://doi.org/10.1029/2008GL033986
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