Author/Authors :
Emile A. Okal، نويسنده , , Vasily V. Titov ، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
We define a new magnitude scale, MTSU, allowing the quantification of the seismic moment
M0 of an earthquake based on recordings of its tsunami in the far field by ocean-bottom pressure sensors
(‘‘tsunameters’’) deployed in ocean basins, far from continental or island shores which are known to affect
profoundly and in a nonlinear fashion the amplitude of the tsunami wave. The formula for MTSU,
MTSU = log10 M0 ) 20 = log10 X (x) + CD
TSU + CS
TSU + C0, where X (x) is the spectral amplitude of
the tsunami, CD
TSU a distance correction and CS
TSU a source correction, is directly adapted from the mantle
magnitude Mm introduced for seismic surface waves by OKAL and TALANDIER. Like Mm, its corrections are
fully justified theoretically based on the representation of a tsunami wave as a branch of the Earth’s normal
modes. Even the locking constant C0, which may depend on the nature of the recording (surface amplitude
of the tsunami or overpressure at the ocean floor) and its units, is predicted theoretically. MTSU combines
the power of a theoretically developed algorithm, with the robustness of a magnitude measurement that
does not take into account such parameters as focal geometry and exact depth, which may not be available
under operational conditions in the framework of tsunami warning. We verify the performance of the
concept on simulations of the great 1946 Aleutian tsunami at two virtual gauges, and then apply the
algorithm to 24 records of 7 tsunamis at DART tsunameters during the years 1994–2003. We find that
MTSU generally recovers the seismic moment M0 within 0.2 logarithmic units, even under unfavorable
conditions such as excessive focal depth and refraction of the tsunami wave around continental masses.
Finally, we apply the algorithm to the JASON satellite trace obtained over the Bay of Bengal during the
2004 Sumatra tsunami, after transforming the trace into a time series through a simple ad hoc procedure.
Results are surprisingly good, with most estimates of the moment being over 1029 dyn-cm, and thus
identifying the source as an exceptionally large earthquake.
Keywords :
Tsunami , normal mode theory , tsunami warning. , magnitudes