Geophysical Research Letters (Sep 2024)
Isotropic High‐Frequency Radiation in Near‐Fault Seismic Data
Abstract
Abstract We compare Fourier Amplitude Spectra of Fault Normal (FN) and Fault Parallel (FP) seismograms at near‐fault sites for seven strike‐slip earthquakes with moment magnitudes Mw ≥ 6. For all events we find large FN/FP ratios at low frequencies consistent with near‐fault S‐wave radiation patterns for strike‐slip earthquakes. However, the difference diminishes with increasing frequency and FN/FP is about 1 above a transition frequency. The results may reflect small tensile/isotropic components in the earthquake rupture zones that homogenize the high‐frequency radiation in different directions at near‐fault sites. The FN/FP ratios at low frequencies and transition frequencies above which FN ∼ FP vary among the analyzed earthquakes and have no clear correlation with the magnitudes. The lack of correlation may signify a characteristic scale (e.g., process zone size, duration of source time function) controlling the isotropic radiation, and/or wave propagation and other effects that mask the source effects.