2:30 PM - 2:45 PM
[SSS05-04] Effects of curvature and lateral heterogeneities in elasticity constants on coseismic deformation
Keywords:crustal deformation, lateral heterogeneity, finite element method, gravity, satellite geodesy, seafloor crustal deformation
The essential component to construct a theoretical model is a Green’s function (GF) prescribing the elastic response to an internal dislocation. Many existing GFs assume a flat Earth and treat the effects of self-gravitation only approximately. Such GFs cause modeling errors when dealing with wide-area deformations obtained by the above observations. A spherical Earth model can be used to calculate the global deformation including the change in the gravity field naturally. However, most models considering lateral heterogeneities, based on an ordinary finite-element method (FEM), do not solve the deformation over the entire sphere and the effects of self-gravitation are also approximated.
In this presentation, we first compare a flat-Earth model with the PREM in the coseismic elastic deformation due to a great earthquake and show that a spherical model is necessary to deal with near-field (i.e., seafloor deformation) and far-field (i.e., GNSS) observation data consistently. Next, we introduce a spectral FEM, which combines a 1-D finite element and a spherical harmonic representation, to calculate global coseismic deformation effectively. We modify this method to include lateral heterogeneities in the elasticity constants and apply it to a deep earthquake. The effects of lateral heterogeneities in Lame’s constants are evaluated by comparing a surface displacement obtained for a laterally heterogeneous model with that obtained for a spherically symmetric case (PREM). A preliminary result indicates that the effect of lateral heterogeneity in the shear modulus is larger than in the bulk modulus and that a local heterogeneity including the source region can affect the coseismic deformation as strongly as a regional-scale heterogeneity outside the source region.