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Seismic moment tensor inversion with theory errors from 2-D Earth structure: implications for the 2009-2017 DPRK nuclear blasts

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Hu, Jinyin
Pham, Thanh Son
Tkalcic, Hrvoje

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Oxford University Press

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Determining the seismic moment tensor (MT) from the observed waveforms with available Earth's structure models is known as seismic waveform MT inversion. It remains challenging for small to moderate-size earthquakes at regional scales. First, because shallow isotropic (ISO) and compensated linear vector dipole (CLVD) components of MT radiate similar long-period waveforms at regional distances, an intrinsic ISO-CVLD ambiguity impedes resolving seismic sources at shallow depths within the Earth's crust. Secondly, regional scales usually bear 3-D structures; thus, inaccurate Earth's structure models can cause unreliable MT solutions but are rarely considered a theory error in the MT inversion. So far, only the error of the 1-D earth model (1-D structural error), apart from data errors, has been explicitly modelled in the source studies because of relatively inexpensive computation. Here, we utilize a hierarchical Bayesian MT inversion to address the above problems. Our approach takes advantage of affine-invariant ensemble samplers to explore the ISO-CLVD trade-off space thoroughly and effectively. Station-specific time-shifts are also searched for as free parameters to treat the structural errors along specific source-station paths (2-D structural errors). Synthetic experiments demonstrate the method's advantage in resolving the dominating ISO components. The explosive events conducted by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) are well-studied, and we use them to demonstrate highly similar source mechanisms, including dominating ISO and significant CLVD components. The recovered station-specific time-shifts from the blasts present a consistent pattern, which provides a better understanding of the azimuthal variation of Earth's 2-D structures surrounding the events' location.

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Geophysical Journal International

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Open Access

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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

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