Determination of Local Magnitude for Earthquakes Recorded from the Texas Seismological Network (TexNet)

2020 ◽  
Vol 91 (6) ◽  
pp. 3223-3235
Author(s):  
Florentia Kavoura ◽  
Alexandros Savvaidis ◽  
Ellen Rathje

Abstract In this study, we present a local magnitude (ML) relation for the earthquakes recorded from the Texas Seismological Network (TexNet) between the dates of 1 January 2017 and 31 July 2019. Using a comprehensive seismic dataset from earthquakes in Texas, we propose a distance correction term −logA0, which is consistent with the original definition of the Richter magnitude. The proposed distance correction calculation for the TexNet events accounts for the attenuation characteristics of the direct and refracted waves over different distance ranges. Regression analysis of Wood–Anderson amplitudes results in the following trilinear function, which represents the attenuation attributes of the events under investigation: −logA0={2.07×log(Rhyp)+0.0002×(Rhyp−100)−0.72Rhyp≤16  km1.54×log(Rhyp)+0.0002×(Rhyp−100)−0.0816  km<Rhyp≤105  km,0.29×log(Rhyp)+0.0002×(Rhyp−100)+2.45Rhyp>105  km in which Rhyp is the hypocentral distance (km). The derived distance correction relationship results in an accurate ML relationship for Texas that is unbiased over a 200 km distance range. Compared with other ML relations, the proposed relation in this study gives lower ML values over all distances than those calculated by Richter (1958), Hutton and Boore (1987), Babaie Mahani and Kao (2019), and Quinones et al. (2019) by an average of 0.01, 0.12, 0.16, and 0.15 units, respectively; this study’s proposed relation gives higher ML values over all distances than those calculated by Scales et al. (2017), Yenier (2017), and Greig et al. (2018) by an average of 0.28, 0.01, and 0.08 units, respectively.

1987 ◽  
Vol 77 (6) ◽  
pp. 2074-2094
Author(s):  
L. K. Hutton ◽  
David M. Boore

Abstract Measurements (9,941) of peak amplitudes on Wood-Anderson instruments (or simulated Wood-Anderson instruments) in the Southern California Seismographic Network for 972 earthquakes, primarily located in southern California, were studied with the aim of determining a new distance correction curve for use in determining the local magnitude, ML. Events in the Mammoth Lakes area were found to give an unusual attenuation pattern and were excluded from the analysis, as were readings from any one earthquake at distances beyond the first occurrence of amplitudes less than 0.3 mm. The remaining 7,355 amplitudes from 814 earthquakes yielded the following equation for ML distance correction, log A0 − log A 0 = 1.110 log ( r / 100 ) + 0.00189 ( r − 100 ) + 3.0 where r is hypocentral distance in kilometers. A new set of station corrections was also determined from the analysis. The standard deviation of the ML residuals obtained by using this curve and the station corrections was 0.21. The data used to derive the equation came from earthquakes with hypocentral distances ranging from about 10 to 700 km and focal depths down to 20 km (with most depths less than 10 km). The log A0 values from this equation are similar to the standard values listed in Richter (1958) for 50 < r < 200 km (in accordance with the definition of ML, the log A0 value for r = 100 km was constrained to equal his value). The Wood-Anderson amplitudes decay less rapidly, however, than implied by Richter's correction. Because of this, the routinely determined magnitudes have been too low for nearby stations (r < 50 km) and too high for distant stations (r > 200 km). The effect at close distances is consistent with that found in several other studies, and is simply due to a difference in the observed ≈ 1/r geometrical spreading for body waves and the 1/r2 spreading assumed by Gutenberg and Richter in the construction of the log A0 table. ML's computed from our curve and those reported in the Caltech catalog show a systematic dependence on magnitude: small earthquakes have larger magnitudes than in the catalog and large earthquakes have smaller magnitudes (by as much as 0.6 units). To a large extent, these systematic differences are due to the nonuniform distribution of data in magnitude-distance space (small earthquakes are preferentially recorded at close distances relative to large earthquakes). For large earthquakes, however, the difference in the two magnitudes is not solely due to the new correction for attenuation; magnitudes computed using Richter's log A0 curve are also low relative to the catalog values. The differences in that case may be due to subjective judgment on the part of those determining the catalog magnitudes, the use of data other than the Caltech Wood-Anderson seismographs, the use of different station corrections, or the use of teleseismic magnitude determinations. Whatever their cause, the departures at large magnitude may explain a 1.0:0.7 proportionality found by Luco (1982) between ML's determined from real Wood-Anderson records and those from records synthesized from strong-motion instruments. If it were not for the biases in reported magnitudes, Luco's finding would imply a magnitude-dependent shape in the attenuation curves. We studied residuals in three magnitude classes (2.0 < ML ≦ 3.5, 3.5 < ML ≦ 5.5, and 5.5 < ML ≦ 7.0) and found no support for such a magnitude dependence. Based on our results, we propose that local magnitude scales be defined such that ML = 3 correspond to 10 mm of motion on a Wood-Anderson instrument at 17 km hypocentral distance, rather than 1 mm of motion at 100 km. This is consistent with the original definition of magnitude in southern California and will allow more meaningful comparison of earthquakes in regions having very different attenuation of waves within the first 100 km.


2011 ◽  
Vol 38 (11) ◽  
pp. 2395-2399 ◽  
Author(s):  
ZAHI TOUMA ◽  
DAFNA D. GLADMAN ◽  
DOMINIQUE IBAÑEZ ◽  
SHAHRZAD TAGHAVI-ZADEH ◽  
MURRAY B. UROWITZ

Objective.To evaluate the performance of the Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) Responder Index (SRI) when the SLE Disease Activity Index 2000 (SLEDAI-2K) is substituted with SLEDAI-2K Responder Index-50 (SRI-50), a valid and reliable index of disease activity improvement. Also, to determine whether the SRI-50 will enhance the ability of SRI in detecting responders.Methods.Our study was conducted on patients who attended the Lupus Clinic from September 2009 to September 2010. SLEDAI-2K, SRI-50, the British Isles Lupus Assessment Group measure, and the Physician’s Global Assessment were determined initially and at followup. SRI was determined at the followup visit according to its original definition using the SLEDAI-2K score and by substituting SLEDAI-2K with SRI-50.Results.A total of 117 patients with SLEDAI-2K ≥ 4 at baseline were studied. Patients had 1 followup visit over a 3-month period. Twenty-nine percent of patients met the original definition of SRI and 35% of patients met the definition of SRI when SLEDAI-2K was substituted with SRI-50. The use of SRI-50 allowed determination of significant improvement in 7 additional patients. This improvement could not be discerned with the use of SLEDAI-2K as a component of SRI. At followup visits that showed improvement, SRI-50 scores decreased to a greater extent than SLEDAI-2K scores (p < 0.0001).Conclusion.SRI-50 enhances the ability of SRI to identify patients with clinically important improvement in disease activity. SRI-50 was superior to SLEDAI-2K in detecting partial clinical improvement, ≥ 50%, between visits. These properties of the SRI-50 enable it to be used as an independent outcome measure of improvement or as a component of SRI in clinical trials.


2020 ◽  
Vol 110 (4) ◽  
pp. 1971-1981
Author(s):  
Camilo Muñoz Lopez ◽  
Laura Velasquez ◽  
Viviana Dionicio

ABSTRACT New calibration for local magnitude (ML) was performed for Colombia. The territory was divided into five zones using reported attenuation values for different areas of the country and correlating this information with the mapped lithologies, the absence or presence of volcanic activity, and patterns in the hypocentral locations of seismicity. Seismic data from the Colombian National Seismic Network—Colombian Geological Survey (RSNC-SGC) were used to obtain a total of 81,232 peak amplitudes from 22,816 earthquakes recorded between January 2015 and August 2017. This set of data was incorporated into a linear inversion to calculate the distance-correction functions for each zone. A new methodology is proposed for calculating the base level of the distance-correction function or parameter c, using the amplitude values for earthquakes with moment magnitudes (Mw) close to 3 measured at stations at distances close to 100 km. The distance-correction logA0 functions obtained in this study for the five zones are: Zone  1:−logA0=1.245×log(r)+0.0024×r−2.051,Zone  2:−logA0=1.056×log(r)+0.0021×r−1.76,Zone  3:−logA0=1.07×log(r)+0.0013×r−1.531,Zone  4:−logA0=1.241×log(r)+0.0015×r−2.178,Zone  5:−logA0=0.711×log(r)+0.0009×r−0.69, in which r is the hypocentral distance in kilometers. The results of this study are in use in the RSNC-SGC since September 2018. Before using the equations presented here, the values of local magnitude were previously underestimated for the entire Colombian territory. This work allows the calculation of the local magnitude using the largest attenuation changes in addition to decreasing discrepancies with other magnitude types such as Mw and those calculated by international networks.


1984 ◽  
Vol 74 (5) ◽  
pp. 1827-1843
Author(s):  
William H. Bakun ◽  
William B. Joyner

Abstract Nine hundred fifty-seven maximum zero-to-peak Wood-Anderson amplitudes A (synthesized or recorded) from 40 horizontal-component seismographs (20 sites) with 0 ≲ Δ ≲ 400 km for 106 earthquakes with 18 ≦ log M0 ≦ 22.3 in central California have been fit in a least-squares sense using the parametric form log A ij = − n log R ij − K R ij − ∑ l = 1 40 S l δ ij + ∑ k = 1 106 C k δ ik where Aij = A (mm) for earthquake i on seismograph component j, δik = Kronecker delta, R = hypocentral distance, and n, K, Sl, and Ck are variables determined by regression analysis. The Ck are a magnitude measure, and the Sl are station corrections constrained to have zero average. We find n = 1.018 ± 0.107 and K = 0.00291 ± 0.00070 km−1. Setting n = 1, appropriate for body-wave propagation in homogeneous media, yields K = 0.00301 ± 0.00036 km−1. Following Richter's definition of an ML = 3 earthquake as one for which A = 1 mm at Δ = 100 km and S1 = 0, we express the local magnitude ML as ML = log A − log A0, where -log A0 = n log (R/100) + K (R − 100) + 3. For 30 ≲ Δ ≲ 475 km, the -log A0 values using n = 1 and K = 0.00301 km−1 are within 0.15 of Richter's values for southern California. For Δ ≲ 30 km, Richter's values are significantly smaller than those obtained here, a result consistent with recent studies of −log A0 for southern California. Our results suggest that the ML scale as commonly used underestimates the sizes of small shocks that are predominantly recorded at Δ ≲ 30 km.


2015 ◽  
Vol 86 (5) ◽  
pp. 1383-1392 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barbara Lolli ◽  
Paolo Gasperini ◽  
Francesco Mariano Mele ◽  
Gianfranco Vannucci

Author(s):  
Irina Eduardovna Ostrovskaya ◽  
Dina Valer'evna Mukhina ◽  
Ivan Ivanovich Dyakov

Currently the development of entrepreneurial potential of the youth becomes a priority of socioeconomic policy of the country, as well as a strategic vector in modern higher education. The subject of this research is the essence, content and specificity of entrepreneurial potential of university students. The goal consists in the development of theoretical approaches towards determination and clarification of the concept of entrepreneurial potential of students within the system of higher education. Research methodology is based on the systemic, competence, and subject-activity approach, as well as included the methods of theoretical analysis and summarization of the results of scientific research. The authors examine different approaches towards determination of the essence and content of the concepts &ldquo;entrepreneurial potential&rdquo; and &ldquo;entrepreneurial potential of an individual&rdquo;. A conclusion is made that under the current circumstances the concept of &ldquo;entrepreneurial potential of a student&rdquo;, which would reflect the peculiarities of student as a carrier of entrepreneurial potential, does not exist. Being a subject of educational activity, student is engaged in the process of formation of the own entrepreneurial potential. This defined the need to view student&rsquo;s entrepreneurial potential inseparably from organizational-pedagogical conditions of the process of its formation as educational. The authors present an original definition of the concept of &ldquo;entrepreneurial potential of a student&rdquo; with consideration of the determined peculiarities, which can be used for the development of students&rsquo; entrepreneurial potential within the system of higher education.


2021 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
H.P. Malan Van Rhyn

Ἀποκάλυψισ and ἀποκαλύπτω as words denoting the second coming in the New Testament. Several Greek words are used in the New Testament to denote the second coming of Christ. None of these words can be translated as ‘second coming’. Two of these words are ἀποκάλυψις and ἀποκαλύπτω. This article departed from the viewpoint that God has a telos [purpose] for revealing that Jesus is coming again. Questions arise whether these words, denoting the second coming, can be treated as exact synonyms or whether there are differences in nuance in the meaning of these words. This article is a step in the process to answer these questions. A word study of the concepts ἀποκάλυψις and ἀποκαλύπτω was done and it was investigated how these terms for the second coming of Christ are used in the New Testament. Furthermore, the telos of the revelation regarding the ἀποκάλυψις of Christ in the relevant chapters of Scripture was determined. This is a question that is seldom addressed. For the word study, diachronic and synchronic methods were used. The development of ἀποκάλυψις and ἀποκαλύπτω into suitable words for denoting the second coming was thus tracked from the Old to the New Testament. For the determination of the use of ἀποκάλυψις and ἀποκαλύπτω in the New Testament, as well as for the determination of the telos of the revelation regarding the second coming, exegesis was conducted in the revelation-historical tradition. The result was an original definition of the meaning of ἀποκάλυψις and ἀποκαλύπτω as used in various contexts: ‘It is the triune God’s final revelation of himself in Jesus Christ at his second coming, in glory, in order to fully reveal, fulfil and realise his Word, his master plan, his covenant and his promises and to be in eternal fellowship with his children.’ The telos for the revelation of the ἀποκάλυψις of Christ was determined as warning believers to be prepared, encouraging and comforting them in afflictions and suffering. A theological definition of the meaning of ἀποκάλυψις provides a handy tool for exegetes. Foreknowledge of the telos of the revelation regarding the ἀποκάλυψις could guide exegetes in their endeavours.Contribution: An original theological definition of the meaning of ἀποκάλυψις and ἀποκαλύπτω was provided and the telos of the revelation regarding ἀποκάλυψις and ἀποκαλύπτω was determined as warning believers to be prepared, encouraging and comforting them in afflictions and suffering.


1991 ◽  
Vol 81 (2) ◽  
pp. 379-398 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Alsaker ◽  
L. B. Kvamme ◽  
R. A. Hansen ◽  
A. Dahle ◽  
H. Bungum

Abstract A new local magnitude ML scale has been developed for Norway, based on a regression analysis of synthesized Wood-Anderson records. The scale is applicable for distances up to more than 1000 km, and the data used comprise 741 short-period recordings at 21 seismic stations from 195 earthquakes in the magnitude range 1 to 5 occurring in and around Norway over the last 20 years. Magnitude corrections for distance have been evaluated in terms of a geometrical spreading term a and an anelastic attenuation term b, and the significant regional crustal differences in the area under investigation made it desirable to develop these for several subsets of the data base. The results for a are generally found to be around the commonly found value of 1.0 (using the Lg phase), while the values of b are found to be around 0.0008, consistent with the weak, intraplate attenuation expected for Norway. Compared to interplate California, this difference in attenuation represents more than a factor of ten in amplitude at a distance of 1000 km. New ML scales are commonly tied to Richter's original definition at the standard reference hypocentral distance of 100 km. The significantly weaker Lg wave attenuation in Norway, however, requires a smaller reference distance. We have chosen a value of 60 km, based on an overall assessment of regional coverage, focal depths, and quality of the data. The resulting ML formula for Norway reads M L = log A w a + a log ( R / 60 ) + b ( R - 60 ) + 2.68 + S , where Awa is synthesized Wood-Anderson amplitude (in mm), R is hypocentral distance (in km), and S is a station correction term that for all 21 stations is found to lie within the range ± 0.22. When using the entire data base, the spreading term a equals 1.02 (± 0.09), and the anelastic attenuation term b equals 0.00080 (± 0.00009). When only strictly continental ray paths are selected, the a value decreases to 0.91 (± 0.11) while the value of b increases to 0.00087 (± 0.00011), a difference which on the average accounts for less than 0.1 magnitude units. While all values used in the regressions have been derived for vertical amplitudes, a separate analysis has shown that these are not significantly different from the horizontal ones, and the new scale is therefore applicable to both. In order to facilitate the practical use of this new ML scale, a relation has also been established between observed seismogram amplitudes in nanometers (corrected for instrument response) and the synthesized Wood-Anderson amplitudes. This relation reads log Awa = 0.925 log Aobs − 2.32. The new ML magnitudes for the events analyzed are in good agreement with those calculated from a previously used relation developed by Båth for Sweden. The ML values have also regressively been related to a data set of Ms magnitudes, yielding the relation Ms = 0.83 ML + 1.09.


1995 ◽  
Vol 85 (4) ◽  
pp. 1236-1243
Author(s):  
Martha Kane Savage ◽  
John G. Anderson

Abstract We have computed synthetic Wood-Anderson seismograms for over 1100 arrivals at 10 three-component, broadband digital stations in the UNR western Great Basin-eastern Sierra Nevada network. These represent all the available records from local earthquakes over magnitude 3.5 between 1990 and June of 1993, plus selected events of smaller magnitude. There were 77 events ranging in magnitude from 2.2 to 5.9, including four events over magnitude 5. The distances considered ranged from 15 to 600 km, with the best-represented range being from 30 to 450 km. We invert these measurements to determine distance and station corrections appropriate for a local-magnitude scale, constrained by Richter's original definition that an earthquake of ML = 3 will cause a 1-mm zero to peak deflection of the Wood-Anderson seismogram at 100 km from the epicenter. The results between 30 and 450 km were essentially independent of choice of curve-fitting parameters. In the 30- to 500-km distance region, the smooth distance-correction curves were very similar to that determined by Richter (1958), which is still used for southern California earthquakes. We propose to use Richter's distance-correction curve in reporting amplitude magnitudes from our digital network.


2021 ◽  
pp. 23-33
Author(s):  
Nikita Andreevich Shtukarev ◽  
Yurii Shlemovich Strelets

Modern Russian society is currently on the verge of shifting from the traditional (pre-modern) and new (modern) value system, and is characterized by intermediateness and transitivity.&nbsp;In this context, the identity becomes unstable, marginal, without a solid foundation of values.&nbsp;This actualizes the problem of determination of axiological contradictions of the modern Russian society and the degree of their impact upon the cultural institutions formed in accordance with the professional criteria, namely professional culture of the future lawyer.&nbsp;The goal of this article is to establish&nbsp; axiological contradictions of the modern Russian society and determine the degree of their impact upon professional culture of the future lawyer.&nbsp;Methodological framework is comprised of culturological and axiological approaches. Analysis is conducted on the key development trends of the modern Russian society, which explicates the value contradictions of the Russian society at the present stage. The author provides the original definition of professional culture of the lawyer, reveals the conceptual components of professional culture, as well as the depth and degree of impact of the existing axiological&nbsp;contradictions upon the value core of professional culture of the future lawyer. It is noted that the revealed axiological contradictions of the modern Russian society aggravate the ethical issues of professional culture of the future lawyer. In this regard, the author offers the measures of social support for the future lawyers aimed at minimization of ethical contradictions in professional activity.


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