Abstract

Statistical descriptions of earthquakes offer important probabilistic information, and newly emerging technologies of high-precision observations and machine learning collectively advance our knowledge regarding complex earthquake behaviors. Still, there remains a formidable knowledge gap for predicting individual large earthquakes’ locations and magnitudes. Here, this study shows that the individual large earthquakes may have unique signatures that can be represented by new high-dimensional features—Gauss curvature-based coordinates. Particularly, the observed earthquake catalog data are transformed into a number of pseudo physics quantities (i.e., energy, power, vorticity, and Laplacian) which turn into smooth surface-like information via spatio-temporal convolution, giving rise to the new high-dimensional coordinates. Validations with 40-year earthquakes in the West U.S. region show that the new coordinates appear to hold uniqueness for individual large earthquakes (M_w ge 7.0), and the pseudo physics quantities help identify a customized data-driven prediction model. A Bayesian evolutionary algorithm in conjunction with flexible bases can identify a data-driven model, demonstrating its promising reproduction of individual large earthquake’s location and magnitude. Results imply that an individual large earthquake can be distinguished and remembered while its best-so-far model can be customized by machine learning. This study paves a new way to data-driven automated evolution of individual earthquake prediction.

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