IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing (Jan 2021)

Possible Atmosphere and Ionospheric Anomalies of the 2019 Pakistan Earthquake Using Statistical and Machine Learning Procedures on MODIS LST, GPS TEC, and GIM TEC

  • Amna Hafeez,
  • Munawar Shah,
  • Muhsan Ehsan,
  • Punyawi Jamjareegulgarn,
  • Junaid Ahmed,
  • M. Arslan Tariq,
  • Shahid Iqbal,
  • Najam Abbas Naqvi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/JSTARS.2021.3119382
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14
pp. 11126 – 11133

Abstract

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Identifying atmospheric and ionospheric anomalies based on remote sensing satellites has contributed highly to develop the hypothesis of lithosphere-atmosphere-ionosphere coupling over the earthquake (EQ) epicenter during the seismic preparation period. This article has investigated the variations of potential EQ precursor in daytime and nighttime land surface temperature (LST) before and after the 2019 Pakistan EQ from Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) satellite. The nighttime LST values of MODIS exhibit temporal anomalies during nighttime period within a time window of five days before and after the main shock day. Furthermore, the LST values predicted by artificial neural network (ANN) validate the significant enhancement in nighttime time series of MODIS. The nighttime LST anomalies obtained from the observation and ANN prediction are more than 20% and 7% of normal distribution beyond the confidence bounds, respectively, within five days after the main shock. Likewise, the ionospheric anomaly from daily total electron content (TEC) values at Sukkur Global Positioning System (GPS) station confirms the EQ associated ionospheric perturbations on the day after the main shock. The Global Ionospheric Maps (GIMs) also show the TEC anomalies during 1000–1400 LT on September 25, 2019.

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