Some possible correlations between electro-magnetic emission and seismic activity during West Bohemia 2008 earthquake swarm

A potential link between electromagnetic emission (EME) and seismic activity (SA) has been the subject of scientific speculations for a long time. EME versus SA relations obtained during the 2008 earthquake swarm which occurred in West Bohemia are presented. First, a brief characterisation of the se...

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Main Author: P. Kolář
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2010-10-01
Series:Solid Earth
Online Access:http://www.solid-earth.net/1/93/2010/se-1-93-2010.pdf
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spelling doaj-322dae1fa6ec4256aadf24601666bb122020-11-25T01:42:23ZengCopernicus PublicationsSolid Earth1869-95101869-95292010-10-0111939810.5194/se-1-93-2010Some possible correlations between electro-magnetic emission and seismic activity during West Bohemia 2008 earthquake swarmP. KolářA potential link between electromagnetic emission (EME) and seismic activity (SA) has been the subject of scientific speculations for a long time. EME versus SA relations obtained during the 2008 earthquake swarm which occurred in West Bohemia are presented. First, a brief characterisation of the seismic region and then the EME recording method and data analysis will be described. No simple direct link between EME and SA intensity was observed, nevertheless a deeper statistical analysis indicates: (i) slight increase of EME activity in the time interval 60 to 30 min before a seismic event with prevalent periods about 10 min, (ii) some gap in EME activity approximately 2 h after the event, and (iii) again a flat maximum about 4 h after the seismic events. These results qualitatively correspond with the observations from other seismically active regions (Fraser-Smith et al., 1990). The global decrease of EME activity correlating with the swarm activity decay was also observed. Due to the incomplete EME data and short observation time, these results are limited in reliability and are indicative only.http://www.solid-earth.net/1/93/2010/se-1-93-2010.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author P. Kolář
spellingShingle P. Kolář
Some possible correlations between electro-magnetic emission and seismic activity during West Bohemia 2008 earthquake swarm
Solid Earth
author_facet P. Kolář
author_sort P. Kolář
title Some possible correlations between electro-magnetic emission and seismic activity during West Bohemia 2008 earthquake swarm
title_short Some possible correlations between electro-magnetic emission and seismic activity during West Bohemia 2008 earthquake swarm
title_full Some possible correlations between electro-magnetic emission and seismic activity during West Bohemia 2008 earthquake swarm
title_fullStr Some possible correlations between electro-magnetic emission and seismic activity during West Bohemia 2008 earthquake swarm
title_full_unstemmed Some possible correlations between electro-magnetic emission and seismic activity during West Bohemia 2008 earthquake swarm
title_sort some possible correlations between electro-magnetic emission and seismic activity during west bohemia 2008 earthquake swarm
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Solid Earth
issn 1869-9510
1869-9529
publishDate 2010-10-01
description A potential link between electromagnetic emission (EME) and seismic activity (SA) has been the subject of scientific speculations for a long time. EME versus SA relations obtained during the 2008 earthquake swarm which occurred in West Bohemia are presented. First, a brief characterisation of the seismic region and then the EME recording method and data analysis will be described. No simple direct link between EME and SA intensity was observed, nevertheless a deeper statistical analysis indicates: (i) slight increase of EME activity in the time interval 60 to 30 min before a seismic event with prevalent periods about 10 min, (ii) some gap in EME activity approximately 2 h after the event, and (iii) again a flat maximum about 4 h after the seismic events. These results qualitatively correspond with the observations from other seismically active regions (Fraser-Smith et al., 1990). The global decrease of EME activity correlating with the swarm activity decay was also observed. Due to the incomplete EME data and short observation time, these results are limited in reliability and are indicative only.
url http://www.solid-earth.net/1/93/2010/se-1-93-2010.pdf
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