Atmosphere, ocean and lithosphere interaction as a possible drive of earthquake triggering

The comparison of tiltmeter and strainmeter data in the periods of the strongest earthquakes with tropical cyclone activities in the World Ocean during January–April 2014 is made. Main features of the observed co-seismic tilt and strain processes are consistent with the results obtained for the stro...

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Main Authors: Victor Volkov, Jan Mrlina, Mstislav Dubrov, Vladimir Smirnov, Sergey Golovachev, Vaclav Polak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2020-11-01
Series:Geodesy and Geodynamics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674984720300574
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spelling doaj-b15ba2787adb4e1f88b98c30dc73eeef2021-04-02T18:53:05ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Geodesy and Geodynamics1674-98472020-11-01116442454Atmosphere, ocean and lithosphere interaction as a possible drive of earthquake triggeringVictor Volkov0Jan Mrlina1Mstislav Dubrov2Vladimir Smirnov3Sergey Golovachev4Vaclav Polak5Schmidt Institute of Physics of the Earth of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russian FederationInstitute of Geophysics of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Praha, Czech RepublicKotel'nikov Institute of Radioengineering and Electronics of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Fryazino, Russian Federation; Corresponding author.Kotel'nikov Institute of Radioengineering and Electronics of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Fryazino, Russian FederationKotel'nikov Institute of Radioengineering and Electronics of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Fryazino, Russian FederationInstitute of Geophysics of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Praha, Czech RepublicThe comparison of tiltmeter and strainmeter data in the periods of the strongest earthquakes with tropical cyclone activities in the World Ocean during January–April 2014 is made. Main features of the observed co-seismic tilt and strain processes are consistent with the results obtained for the strongest events during 1997–2004. The time-frequency data analysis and the comparison of the analysis results with the anomalous geomagnetic and ionospheric activity come to an agreement with the observed phenomena. The obtained results have allowed the triggering mechanism of seismicity to be proposed. The process begins as spatial and temporal swings of the regions of tropical cyclone origins and the basins of their activity. The powerful cyclone development accompanies a wide range of earthquake precursory phenomena, including abnormal behavior of ultra-wideband (0.002 mHz–3 Hz) Earth's oscillations, which can be recorded at far distances up to 1000–10,000 km. The daily dissipation energy of the most powerful tropical cyclone (hurricane, typhoon) is estimated to have same order of magnitude as the energy released by an event of Mw 7–9, as well, atmospheric depressions are big enough to trigger a forthcoming strong earthquake. The triggering mechanism could be caused by quasi-static and time-dependent surface loading that produces vertical tension and shear deformations. This loading affects the seafloor and coastline where they fall close to the adjacent tectonic plate boundaries.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674984720300574Tilt and strainTropical cycloneEarthquakeHurricane
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Victor Volkov
Jan Mrlina
Mstislav Dubrov
Vladimir Smirnov
Sergey Golovachev
Vaclav Polak
spellingShingle Victor Volkov
Jan Mrlina
Mstislav Dubrov
Vladimir Smirnov
Sergey Golovachev
Vaclav Polak
Atmosphere, ocean and lithosphere interaction as a possible drive of earthquake triggering
Geodesy and Geodynamics
Tilt and strain
Tropical cyclone
Earthquake
Hurricane
author_facet Victor Volkov
Jan Mrlina
Mstislav Dubrov
Vladimir Smirnov
Sergey Golovachev
Vaclav Polak
author_sort Victor Volkov
title Atmosphere, ocean and lithosphere interaction as a possible drive of earthquake triggering
title_short Atmosphere, ocean and lithosphere interaction as a possible drive of earthquake triggering
title_full Atmosphere, ocean and lithosphere interaction as a possible drive of earthquake triggering
title_fullStr Atmosphere, ocean and lithosphere interaction as a possible drive of earthquake triggering
title_full_unstemmed Atmosphere, ocean and lithosphere interaction as a possible drive of earthquake triggering
title_sort atmosphere, ocean and lithosphere interaction as a possible drive of earthquake triggering
publisher KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
series Geodesy and Geodynamics
issn 1674-9847
publishDate 2020-11-01
description The comparison of tiltmeter and strainmeter data in the periods of the strongest earthquakes with tropical cyclone activities in the World Ocean during January–April 2014 is made. Main features of the observed co-seismic tilt and strain processes are consistent with the results obtained for the strongest events during 1997–2004. The time-frequency data analysis and the comparison of the analysis results with the anomalous geomagnetic and ionospheric activity come to an agreement with the observed phenomena. The obtained results have allowed the triggering mechanism of seismicity to be proposed. The process begins as spatial and temporal swings of the regions of tropical cyclone origins and the basins of their activity. The powerful cyclone development accompanies a wide range of earthquake precursory phenomena, including abnormal behavior of ultra-wideband (0.002 mHz–3 Hz) Earth's oscillations, which can be recorded at far distances up to 1000–10,000 km. The daily dissipation energy of the most powerful tropical cyclone (hurricane, typhoon) is estimated to have same order of magnitude as the energy released by an event of Mw 7–9, as well, atmospheric depressions are big enough to trigger a forthcoming strong earthquake. The triggering mechanism could be caused by quasi-static and time-dependent surface loading that produces vertical tension and shear deformations. This loading affects the seafloor and coastline where they fall close to the adjacent tectonic plate boundaries.
topic Tilt and strain
Tropical cyclone
Earthquake
Hurricane
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674984720300574
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