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Ambient Noise Attenuation Tomography Reveals an Asymmetric Damage Zone across San Jacinto Fault near Anza, California

Xin Liu, Gregory C. Beroza, & Yehuda Ben-Zion

Published July 25, 2022, SCEC Contribution #11881

We perform seismic attenuation tomography of the shallow structure for the San Jacinto Fault in the Ramona Reservation of southern California. The study uses ambient seismic noise recorded by a linear array of 65 3-C sensors across the fault. We extract amplitude decay information, with uncertainty, from noise interferometry functions. To account for strong heterogeneities in the complex shallow fault zone structure, we apply a frequency-dependent amplitude correction for focusing/defocusing effects using inverted phase velocity maps obtained by solving the transport equation. We then estimate the attenuation structure based on the linear station-triplet method for both Love and Rayleigh waves. The attenuation tomography indicates strong attenuation correlated with known San Jacinto Fault surface traces. The Love wave attenuation tomography reveals an asymmetric damage zone that exists primarily on the fault side with faster seismic velocity, consistent with earthquake ruptures on a fault bimaterial interface with preferred propagation direction to the northwest.

Citation
Liu, X., Beroza, G. C., & Ben-Zion, Y. (2022). Ambient Noise Attenuation Tomography Reveals an Asymmetric Damage Zone across San Jacinto Fault near Anza, California. Geophysical Research Letters,. https://doi.org/10.1029/2022GL099562