Seismicity and Active Seismic Structures in the Valle de la Trinidad, Baja California, Mexico
Using data from a local seismic network, we analyze seismicity in the Valle de la Trinidad on the Baja California peninsula and find that while some moderate earthquakes trigger sustained aftershock sequences, others do not. Relocated hypocenters align with the San Miguel fault and a previously unmapped intersecting structure, and the 2020 sequence demonstrates that rupture across intersecting faults controls the evolution of seismic activity, with temporal variations in focal mechanisms suggesting changes in the local stress field.
Which Global Moment Tensor Catalog Provides the Most Precise Non-Double-Couple Components?
Although the true non-double-couple components of earthquakes are unknown, their noise can be assessed from correlations across different catalogs, revealing that the Global CMT catalog reports them with the highest precision.
Apparent Non-Double-Couple Components as Artifacts of Moment Tensor Inversion
Synthetic tests in which double-couple seismograms generated with perturbed Earth models are inverted using unperturbed models show that apparent non-double-couple components can arise solely from uncertainties in Earth structure.
When are Non-Double-Couple Components of Seismic Moment Tensors Reliable?
Non-double-couple components are generally unreliable, but those of large earthquakes and components exceeding 60% are more consistently determined and thus more likely to reflect real source processes.
On the Documentation, Independence, and Stability of Widely Used Seismological Data Products
Differences between seismic moment tensors reported by different catalogs primarily reflect variations in inversion methodology, including assumptions about Earth structure, station coverage, and phase selection, yet the limited documentation of these procedures prevents users from identifying the specific causes of the discrepancies.
Consistency of Non-Double-Couple Components of Seismic Moment Tensors With Earthquake Magnitude and Mechanism
Analysis of 12,856 seismic moment tensors shows that non-double-couple components remain nearly constant across magnitudes, faulting types, and geologic environments, indicating that they are largely artifacts of the inversion, especially for smaller earthquakes.
Integrated Seismic Program (ISP): A new Python GUI-based software for earthquake seismology and seismic signal processing
The Integrated Seismic Program (ISP) is a modular Python-based software with a graphical interface that enables earthquake seismology tasks such as event location, signal analysis, array processing, moment tensor inversion, and receiver function computation in a user-friendly environment.
Uncertainties in Seismic Moment Tensors Inferred from Differences between Global Catalogs
Comparison of 5,000 seismic moment tensors from the USGS and Global CMT catalogs shows that uncertainties are an order of magnitude larger than the reported waveform-misfit errors, with small events particularly affected by spurious non-double-couple components.
Citizen Scientists Help Detect and Classify Dynamically Triggered Seismic Activity in Alaska
Seismograms converted to audible frequencies can be analyzed by citizen scientists to detect dynamically triggered seismicity, with humans achieving higher accuracy in signal classification than trained machine-learning algorithms.
Using Seismic Source Parameters to Model Frequency-Dependent Surface-Wave Radiation Patterns
The surface-wave radiation pattern product provides frequency-dependent spectral amplitudes of Rayleigh and Love waves as a function of azimuth, computed for arbitrary moment tensor source mechanisms, and is available both as a database of global events and as an interactive tool for user-defined source parameters.