Title
Bayesian parameter estimation for space and time interacting earthquake rupture model using historical and physics-based simulated earthquake catalogs
Date Issued
01 December 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Galvez P.
Ampuero J.P.
Kiremidjian A.
Deierlein G.
Publisher(s)
Seismological Society of America
Abstract
This article introduces a framework to supplement short historical catalogs with synthetic catalogs and determine large earthquakes’ recurrence. For this assessment, we developed a parameter estimation technique for a probabilistic earthquake occurrence model that captures time and space interactions between large mainshocks. The technique is based on a two-step Bayesian update that uses a synthetic catalog from physics-based simulations for initial parameter estimation and then the historical catalog for further calibration, fully characterizing parameter uncertainty. The article also provides a formulation to com-bine multiple synthetic catalogs according to their likelihood of representing empirical earthquake stress drops and Global Positioning System-inferred interseismic coupling. We applied this technique to analyze large-magnitude earthquakes’ recurrence along 650 km of the subduction fault’s interface located offshore Lima, Peru. We built nine 2000 yr long synthetic catalogs using quasi-dynamic earthquake cycle simulations based on the rate-and-state friction law to supplement the 450 yr long historical catalog. When the synthetic catalogs are combined with the historical catalog without propagating their uncertainty, we found average relative reductions larger than 90% in the recurrence parameters’ uncertainty. When we propagated the physics-based simulations’ uncertainty to the posterior, the reductions in uncertainty decreased to 60%–70%. In two Bayesian assessments, we then show that using synthetic catalogs results in higher parameter uncertainty reductions than using only the historical catalog (69% vs. 60% and 83% vs. 80%), demonstrating that synthetic catalogs can be effectively combined with historical data, especially in tectonic regions with short historical catalogs. Finally, we show the implications of these results for time-dependent seismic hazard.
Start page
3356
End page
3373
Volume
111
Issue
6
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Sensores remotos Ingeniería ambiental y geológica Geología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85120086868
Source
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America
ISSN of the container
00371106
Sponsor(s)
The authors thank the Stanford Research Computing Center for providing computational resources. The authors acknowledge Heresi from Stanford University for insightful discussions on the uncertainty of historical catalogs. The authors acknowledge the support by the Shah Family Fellowship, the John A. Blume Fellowship from the Civil Engineering Department at Stanford University, and the Postdoctoral Fellowship from the Andlinger Center at Princeton University. The authors acknowledge the support by the French National Research Agency (ANR) with reference number ANR-15-IDEX-01 through the Université Côte d’Azur's Joint, Excellent and Dynamic Initiative. The authors also appreciate the constructive comments and suggestions of the BSSA reviewers of the article.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus