Home  /  Annals of Geophysics  /  Núm: Vol 58, Par: 0 (2015)  /  Article
ARTICLE
TITLE

The 2009 L’Aquila earthquake coseismic rupture: open issues and new insights from 3D finite element inversion of GPS, InSAR and strong motion data

SUMMARY

We present a Finite Element inverse analysis of the static deformation field for the Mw= 6.3, 2009 L’Aquila earthquake, in order to infer the rupture slip distribution on the fault plane. An univocal solution for the rupture slip distribution has not been reached yet with negative impact for reliable hazard scenarios in a densely populated area. In this study, Finite Element computed Green’s functions were implemented in a linear joint inversion scheme of geodetic (GPS and InSAR) and seismological (strong motion) coseismic deformation data. In order to fully exploit the informative power of our dense dataset and to honor the complexities of the real Earth, we implemented an optimized source model, represented by a fault plane subdivided in variable size patches, embedded in a high-resolution realistic three-dimensional model of the Apenninic seismo-tectonic setting, accounting for topographic reliefs and rheological heterogeneities deduced from local tomography. We infer that the investigated inversion domain contains two minima configurations in the solution space, i.e. a single- and a double-patch slip distribution, which are almost equivalent, so that the available datasets and numerical models are not able to univocally discriminate between them. Nevertheless our findings suggest that a two high-slip patch pattern is slightly favoured.

 Articles related

EMERGEO W.G. :,S. Pucci,P.M. De Martini,R. Civico,R. Nappi,T. Ricci,F. Villani,C.A. Brunori,M. Caciagli,V. Sapia,F.R. Cinti,M. Moro,D. Di Naccio,S. Gori,E. Falcucci,R. Vallone,F. Mazzarini,S. Tarquini,P. Del Carlo,V. Kastelic,M. Carafa,R. De Ritis,G. Gaudiosi,R. Nave,G. Alessio,P. Burrato,A. Smedile,L. Alfonsi,P. Vannoli,M. Pignone,S. Pinzi,U. Fracassi,L. Pizzimenti,M.T. Mariucci,N. Pagliuca,A. Sciarra,R. Carluccio,I. Nicolosi,M. Chiappini,F. D’Ajello Caracciolo,G. Pezzo,A. Patera,R. Azzaro,D. Pantosti,P. Montone,M. Saroli,L. Lo Sardo,M. Lancia    

Since the beginning of the ongoing Amatrice seismic sequence on August 24, 2016, initiated by a Mw 6.0 normal faulting earthquake, the EMERGEO Working Group (an INGV team devoted to earthquake aftermath geological survey) set off to investigate any cosei... see more


Christian Bignami,Pierfrancesco Burrato,Valentina Cannelli,Marco Chini,Emanuela Falcucci,Alessandro Ferretti,Stefano Gori,Christodoulos Kyriakopoulos,Daniele Melini,Marco Moro,Fabrizio Novali,Michele Saroli,Salvatore Stramondo,Gianluca Valensise,Paola Vannoli    

On May 20 and 29, 2012, two earthquakes of magnitudes 5.9 and 5.8 (Mw), respectively, and their aftershock sequences hit the central Po Plain (Italy), about 40 km north of Bologna. More than 2,000 sizable aftershocks were recorded by the Isti-tuto Nazion... see more


Roberto Devoti    

This study provides the mathematical framework for the rigorous combination of coseismic offsets observed by a global positioning system (GPS) network and investigates the results obtained on the occasion of the recent Emilia earthquakes (Italy). This se... see more


Antonio Avallone,Elisabetta D'Anastasio,Enrico Serpelloni,Diana Latorre,Adriano Cavaliere,Ciriaco D'Ambrosio,Sergio Del Mese,Angelo Massucci,Gianpaolo Cecere    

In May-July 2012, Emilia Romagna (northern Italy) was struck by a significant seismic sequence, which was characterized by two moderate-magnitude earthquakes: a Ml 5.9 event on May 20, 2012, at 02:03:53 UTC, and a Ml 5.8 event on May 29, 2012, at 07:00:0... see more


Valentina Cannelli,Daniele Melini,Roberto Devoti,Antonio Piersanti    

We here explore the potential use of publicly available GPS solutions to obtain first-order constraints on a source model immediately following an earthquake, within the limits of GPS solution timeliness and near-field coverage. We use GPS solutions from... see more