Abstract

Abstract Accurate estimate of the shallow slip deficit (SSD) for large strike-slip events is highly dependent on near-fault data. Previous studies have estimated the SSD of the 2023 Kahramanmaraş earthquake doublet, which may vary from a few percent to about 50%. Whether this reduced shallow slip is real or artificial is crucial for understanding the seismic hazards during and following the earthquake doublet. In this study, we inverted for the kinematic slip of this earthquake doublet with refined near-fault Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar observations and compared the results with the source model without further data processing. The model that excludes nonphysical data produced only ∼6% and ∼22% SSD for the M7.8 and 7.6 events, respectively, compared to ∼44% and ∼53% SSD of the model using original data. The increased data gap generally leads to overestimated SSD, but when the data coverage is almost complete, our result shows that the SSD is very sensitive to biased near-fault data which may induce significant artificial SSD. Our results suggest that overestimated SSD may be accompanied by slip migration from shallow toward deeper depths, to meet the total moment or energy release constrained by surface displacement data. The M7.8 event increased static Coulomb stress at where the second M7.6 event nucleated and thus may have triggered the following event.

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