In Pubblicazioni
Abstract
Spectral analysis of earthquake recordings provides fundamental seismological
information. It is used for magnitude calculation, estimation of attenuation, and
the determination of fault rupture properties including slip area, stress drop, and radiated
energy. Further applications are found in site-effect studies and for the calibration
of simulation and empirically based ground-motion prediction equations.
We identified two main limitations of the spectral fitting methods currently used in
the literature. First, the frequency-dependent noise level is not properly accounted for.
Second, there are no mathematically defensible techniques to fit a parametric spectrum
to a seismogram with gaps.
When analyzing an earthquake recording, it is well known that the noise level is not
the same at different frequencies, that is, the noise spectrum is colored. The different,
frequency-dependent, noise levels are mainly due to ambient noise and sensor noise.
Methods in the literature do not properly account for the presence of colored noise.
Seismograms with gaps are usually discarded due to the lack of methodologies to
use them. Modern digital seismograms are occasionally clipped at the arrival of the
strongest ground motion. This is also critical in the study of historical earthquakes in
which few seismograms are available and gaps are common, significantly decreasing
the number of useful records.
In this work, we propose a method to overcome these two limitations. We show
that the spectral fitting can be greatly improved and earthquakes with extremely low
signal-to-noise ratio can be fitted. We show that the impact of gaps on the estimated
parameters is minor when a small fraction of the total energy is missing. We also
present a strategy to reconstruct the missing portion of the seismogram.