Abstract

I have been conducting a study of postseismic deformation following the 2016 Kumamoto earthquake using ALOS-2/PALSAR-2 acquired till 2018. I apply ionospheric correction to interferograms of ALOS-2/PALSAR-2. L-band SAR gives us high coherence enough to reveal surface deformation even in vegetated or mountainous area for pairs of images acquired more than 2 years. Postseismic deformation following the Kumamoto earthquake exceeds 10 cm during 2 years at some spots in and around Kumamoto city and Aso caldera. Westward motion of ~ 6 cm/year was dominant on the southeast side of the Hinagu fault, while westward shift was detected on both sides of the Futagawa fault. The area of latter deformation seems to have correlation with distribution of pyroclastic flow deposits. Significant uplift was found around the eastern Futagawa fault and on the southwestern frank of Aso caldera, whose rate reaches 4 cm/year. There are sharp changes across several coseismic surface ruptures such as Futagawa, Hinagu, and Idenokuchi faults. Rapid subsidence between Futagawa and Idenokuchi faults also found. It is confirmed that local subsidence continued along the Suizenji fault, which newly appeared during the mainshock in Kumamoto City. Subsidence with westward shift of up to 4 cm/year was also found in Aso caldera. Time constant of postseismic decay ranges from 1 month to 600 days at selected points, but that postseismic deformation during the first epochs or two is dominant at point in the Kumamoto Plain. This result suggests multiple source of deformation. Westward motion around the Hinagu fault may be explained with right lateral afterslip on the shallow part of this fault. Subsidence along the Suizenji fault can be attributed to normal faulting on dipping westward. Deformation around the Hinagu and Idenokuchi faults cannot be explained with right lateral afterslip of Futagawa fault, which requires other sources. Deformation in northern part of Aso caldera might be the result of right lateral afterslip on a possible buried fault.

Highlights

  • A sequence of large earthquakes struck the city of Kumamoto and its surroundings, the central part of Kyushu, in April 2016, which claimed more than 200 fatalities including disaster-related deaths

  • We found ionospheric disturbances both in ascending and descending interferograms and sometimes large ramp in corrected interferograms

  • Temporal characteristics of postseismic deformation Postseismic deformation following the 2016 Kumamoto earthquake sequence may have decayed during 2 years, though it may still continue in some areas (Fig. 11c)

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Summary

Introduction

A sequence of large earthquakes struck the city of Kumamoto and its surroundings, the central part of Kyushu, in April 2016, which claimed more than 200 fatalities including disaster-related deaths. P23 covers the surrounding area of the Futagawa and Hinagu faults and Aso caldera and are frequently observed. The most important issue is low coherence in mountainous area on the southeastern side of the Futagawa and Hinagu faults and on northern frank of Aso caldera in Sentinel-1 images.

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