Open Access
Source process of very long period seismic events associated with the 1998 activity of Iwate Volcano, northeastern Japan
Author(s) -
Nishimura Takeshi,
Nakamichi Haruhisa,
Tanaka Satoru,
Sato Minemori,
Kobayashi Tomokatsu,
Ueki Sadato,
Hamaguchi Hiroyuki,
Ohtake Masakazu,
Sato Haruo
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2000jb900155
Subject(s) - seismology , geology , volcano , seismogram , period (music) , seismic moment , seismic wave , seismic energy , magma , fault (geology) , physics , acoustics
We observed very long period seismic events that are associated with the 1998 activity of Iwate Volcano, northeast Japan. The events show a dominant period of 10 s and duration of 30–60 s, often with accompanying short‐period waves at the beginning and at the end of the long‐period signals. By analyzing the broadband seismograms we find that the source elongates in the east‐west direction for ∼4 km at a depth of 2 km beneath the western part of Iwate Volcano. Results of moment tensor inversions show a source mechanism of mutual deflation and inflation of two chambers located at the western and eastern edges of the source region. The source region coincides with the low seismic velocity zone detected by seismic tomography and is very close to the locations of pressure sources estimated from crustal deformation data. On the basis of these results we infer that the very long period seismic events are generated by transportation and movement of magmatic fluid (hot water and/or magma) in a shallow part of the volcano. We further present a simple source model of very long period seismic events based on one‐dimensional flow dynamics and propose a new parameter to characterize the size of very long period event: the energy flow rate, which is obtained by dividing the seismic moment by the dominant period. The energy flow rate was estimated as 3.1×10 12 J/s for the event on July 29, 1998.