Parameter estimation for interseismic surface deformation using data
assimilation
Abstract
Geodetic data provide an opportunity to improve our understanding of the
processes and parameters controlling the dynamics of deformation during
the earthquake cycle at subduction zones. However, the observations
contain noise and are temporally and spatially sparse, whereas dynamical
models are unequivocally imperfect. Also, the relative contributions
from various drivers of surface deformation are poorly constrained by
independent observations. Some drivers may be static or vary slowly in
time (e.g., plate motion), whilst others vary significantly during the
earthquake cycle (e.g., viscoelastic relaxation). Data assimilation
combines prior estimates of dynamical models, with the likelihood of
observations into posterior estimates of the state evolution and
time-independent parameters of a physical process. We explore the
usefulness of data assimilation by using a particle filter to estimate
the (spatially variable) elastic thickness of the overriding plate and
the extent of the locked zone. We assimilate vertical interseismic
surface displacements into a 2D elastic flexural model. The particle
filter uses a Monte Carlo approach to represent the state probability
distribution by a finite number of realizations (“particles”). We use
sequential importance resampling to preserve particles statistically
close to the observations and duplicate and perturb them. Synthetic
experiments demonstrate that the particle filter effectively estimates
1D elastic thickness from synthetic observations. However, elastic
thickness estimates for models with a landward increase in plate
thickness show larger uncertainty near the coast as the sensitivity of
surface displacements reduces with increasing plate thickness.
Interestingly, the effectiveness of the elastic thickness estimation is
highly sensitive to network aperture, including GPS/A. Assimilation of
interseismic vertical velocities prior to the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake
yields estimates of upper plate thickness that agree with previous
studies. However, results of the locked zone extent are not as expected,
which could be due to missing physics in the relatively conceptual
model. These results demonstrate the potential of the particle filter to
better understand the geodynamic process parameters of the earthquake
cycle at subduction zones.