Analysis of the tectonic deformations in the Japanese island arc
following the 2011 Tohoku earthquake based on satellite geodetic data
Abstract
The region of Japanese island arc is one of the most seismically active
regions of the world due to very high plate convergence rate. On March
11, 2011., the great Mw=9.0 Tohoku earthquake occurred in the central
segment of the Japanese subduction zone, the region where the previous
megathrust earthquake was in 869. To identify the spatiotemporal
variations of surface deformations following the 2011 earthquake we
analyzed more than 7 years of continuous GNSS observations from over
1400 stations of GEONET network that covers the entire territory of
Japanese islands. Coseismic displacements captured by GNSS stations
allowed us to model the slip distribution in the earthquake source and
to revealed significant effect of Fossa Magna Graben on the coseismic
deformations pattern. The observed surface displacements before, during
and after the Tohoku earthquake exhibited good agreement with the
expected motions implied by the keyboard model of subduction zones
[Lobkovsky and Baranov, 1984] at the appropriate stages of the
seismic cycle. At the same time, analysis of the displacement rate
variations estimated over 1-year intervals after the Tohoku earthquake
showed an intense ongoing postseismic motion of complex mechanism. We
tested a hypothesis of significant afterslip in the earthquake source
using 1-month cumulative displacements for the first half of the year
after the earthquake. The slip distribution in the earthquake source and
afterslip process were modelled using open-source software package
STATIC1D of F. Pollitz. We also used the open-source software package
VISCO1D of F. Pollitz to test the influence on surface deformations of
rapid viscoelastic relaxation caused by coseismic slip. Our analysis of
the afteslip process showed that its maximal contribution rapidly
decreases in the first six months after the earthquake from 1-3 meters
to 10-20 centimeters per month and cannot predict the observed long-term
displacements.