Abstract

The Asperity Likelihood Model (ALM) hypothesizes that small-scale spatial variations in the b-value of the Gutenberg-Richter relationship have a central role in forecasting future seismicity. The physical basis of the ALM is the concept that the local b-value is inversely dependent on the applied shear stress. Thus low b-values (b 1.1), which can be found, for example, in creeping sections of faults, suggest a lower probability of large events. To turn this hypothesis into a forecast model for Italy, we first determined the regional b-value (b = 0.93 ±0.01) and compared it with the locally determined b-values at each node of the forecast grid, based on sampling radii ranging from 6 km to 20 km. We used the local b-values if their Akaike Information Criterion scores were lower than those of the regional b-values. We then explored two modifications to this model: in the ALM.IT, we declustered the input catalog for M ≥2 and smoothed the node-wise rates of the declustered catalog with a Gaussian filter. Completeness values for each node were determined using the probability-based magnitude of completeness method. In the second model, the hybrid ALM (HALM), as a «hybrid» between a grid-based and a zoning model, the Italian territory was divided into eight distinct regions that depended on the main tectonic regimes, and the local b-value variability was thus mapped using the regional b-values for each tectonic zone.

Highlights

  • Asperities are the locked parts of a fault system that accumulate stress and release most of the energy as large ruptures

  • Two of the forecasts were based on the Asperity Likelihood Model (ALM) [Wiemer and Schorlemmer 2007], but with different choices for the magnitude of completeness and the a-value smoothing, and one was based on the hybrid ALM (HALM), a modified approach that took into account the tectonic settings of the region, according to Gulia and Wiemer [2010]: The ALM: As applied here, the ALM is to a great extent identical to that defined by Wiemer and Schorlemmer [2007] for California

  • For the period 2009-2014, the ALM predicted a total of 8.09 events, the ALM.IT predicted a total of 8.68 events, and the HALM predicted a total of 8.47 events

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Summary

Introduction

Asperities are the locked parts of a fault system that accumulate stress and release most of the energy as large ruptures. This model is based on the results of Gulia and Wiemer [2010], who explored the hypothesis that b-values in Italy depend systematically on the style of faulting of the seismotectonic zones.

Results
Conclusion

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