11:00 AM - 11:15 AM
[SSS07-06] Amplitude dependence of energy dissipation in the crust and upper mantle

Keywords:quality factor, intrinsic attenuation
Here we analyzed M3–5 intraslab (depth: 60–80 km), plate-boundary (10–50 km), and crustal (<~10 km) earthquakes that occurred beneath Tohoku, Japan. First, we calculated the spectral amplitudes using the vertical component of P waves and took the spectral ratio of any pairwise aftershocks in inter-event distances of ≦5 km at stations located within 200 km. Then, we divided the spectral ratio by the travel times to remove the effect of geometrical attenuation. Finally, we calculated the observed spectral ratios by stacking all pairwise earthquakes whose observed amplitude ratios fell within a certain range (every 0.2 in the ordinary logarithm of the amplitude ratio). The stacked spectral ratios were then fitted by the theoretical model to determine the Q-1 difference (ΔQ-1) with respect to different observed amplitude ratios.
The obtained results suggest that ΔQ-1 is zero for earthquake pairs that have identical observed amplitude, whereas ΔQ-1 monotonically increases as the amplitude ratio increases. This positive correlation between the observed amplitude ratio and ΔQ-1 suggests that seismic waves are amplitude dependent for intrinsic attenuation. Furthermore, we found that the intraslab earthquakes show the strongest positive correlation between the amplitude and Q-1. Our model calculation suggests that a proportionality between Q-1 and the seismic amplitude, A, can be represented as Q-1∝An. Here, n is estimated to range from 0.05 to 0.2, increasing with depth. We therefore infer that the physical mechanism causing amplitude-dependent attenuation works more effectively at higher temperature and pressure conditions.