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Leveraging spurious Omori-Utsu relation in the nearest-neighbor declustering method

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arxiv 2410.05874 v2 pith:BZY25LRS submitted 2024-10-08 physics.geo-ph cond-mat.stat-mech

Leveraging spurious Omori-Utsu relation in the nearest-neighbor declustering method

classification physics.geo-ph cond-mat.stat-mech
keywords aftershocksearthquakemethodomori-utsucatalogdeclusteringfluidnatural
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Static and dynamic stress changes in the Earth's crust induced by an earthquake typically trigger other earthquakes. Identifying such aftershocks is an important step in seismic hazard assessment but has remained challenging, especially in cases involving natural fluid migration or anthropogenic fluid injections, which can occur with varying time scales and/or episodically, leading to strong temporal variations in earthquake occurrences. Here, we demonstrate analytically and numerically that earthquake catalogs without triggering can lead to spurious Omori-Utsu and productivity relations for the commonly used nearest-neighbor declustering method. However, we show that the robustness of the Omori-Utsu exponent on newly introduced parameters of the method allows one to determine whether indeed aftershocks are present. For a natural swarm catalog, which lacks a clear distinction between triggered and background events, we find that the catalog is dominated by aftershocks.

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