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1 rthquake rupture, even before the arrival of seismic waves.
2 seismometers in Japan before the arrival of seismic waves.
3 systems imposed by the propagation speed of seismic waves.
4 ts of earthquakes by trapping and amplifying seismic waves.
5 ity in the direction of fast propagation for seismic waves.
6 propagate into the ground as high-frequency seismic waves.
7 at propagate along tectonic faults and cause seismic waves.
8 dary in certain regions using scattered P'P' seismic waves.
9 and latency associated with the slowness of seismic waves.
10 the fault zone and subordinately as radiated seismic waves.
14 l earthquakes globally during passage of the seismic waves and during the following several hours to
15 scale-free dynamics in nature, such as earth seismic waves and stock market fluctuations, suggesting
16 tress changes associated with the passage of seismic waves are thought to trigger earthquakes at grea
18 the observed range dependence in long-period seismic wave arrivals that reflect off of these interfac
20 hat the damage resulted from the focusing of seismic waves by several underground acoustic lenses at
23 ins unknown how the small strains induced by seismic waves can trigger earthquakes at large distances
24 cillatory 'dynamic' deformations radiated as seismic waves can trigger seismicity rate increases, as
25 m these we infer that, if the fault is weak, seismic waves cause the fault core modulus to decrease a
29 significantly lowered if the pressure of the seismic wave drives a volume-reducing phase transformati
31 ith the wrong mainshock time and those using seismic waves far from the Norcia mainshock; both show d
33 ority is generated by the interaction of the seismic wave field with three-dimensional heterogeneity
34 strike-slip faulting mechanism inferred from seismic waves for the aftershock, it generated much larg
38 nstead consistent with the arrival of strong seismic waves from the magnitude M(w) ~10 to 11 earthqua
39 not correspond to arrival times of the main seismic waves from the mainshocks and the dynamically tr
40 rshocks that occur before the arrival of the seismic wave front from the mainshock, which violates ca
41 namically weakened faults may fail after the seismic waves have passed by, and might even cause earth
47 asurements of travel times and amplitudes of seismic waves interacting with mineralogical phase trans
48 ggering of slow slip events (SSE) by passing seismic waves involve seismological questions with impor
49 near behaviour of fault gouge perturbed by a seismic wave may trigger earthquakes, even with such sma
50 speculate that fault damage caused by strong seismic waves may help to explain earthquake clustering
51 reas dynamic (transient) stresses carried by seismic waves may trigger earthquakes both nearby and at
52 ural heterogeneities which strongly scatters seismic waves obscuring the ballistic arrivals normally
53 n the Earth of ~2.0 x 10(13) N that radiated seismic waves observed throughout the planet, with ~25 s
55 ubject to the "traumatic" stress produced by seismic waves of the great 2017 (Mw8.2) Tehuantepec eart
57 for an ergodic model that explains observed seismic wave partitioning, a requirement for full-wave f
59 show that DL models successfully distinguish seismic waves pre/post mainshock in accord with lab and
60 seismogram of this event, we have identified seismic wave precursors, i.e., underside reflections off
62 Using numerical simulations of global-scale seismic wave propagation at unprecedented high frequency
66 computed from a hybrid method, which handles seismic wave propagation through two-dimensional complex
69 This study examines the characteristics of seismic wave reflection and wave-induced fluid flow (WIF
71 lf of the diffracting waveforms, we detected seismic waves scattered by three-dimensional structures
74 s of an anomalous precursor to the reflected seismic wave ScP reveal compressional and shear-wave vel
75 Here we present array-based observations of seismic waves sensitive to this part of the core whose w
77 tle, that are detected as discontinuities in seismic wave speed and for which the pressure and temper
78 w velocity provinces" (LLVPs) are broad, low seismic wave speed anomalies in Earth's lower mantle ben
79 lowermost mantle have been observed to have seismic wave speed reductions of at least 10 per cent, w
82 an approximately 15 degrees dipping, abrupt, seismic wave-speed transition (less than 1 kilometre thi
93 eveal the conversion of primary to secondary seismic waves to image the discontinuities that bound th
97 zation leads to changes in the bulk modulus, seismic wave velocities, and proton mobility and plays a
99 at the bottom of the mantle, leading to low seismic-wave velocities and high electrical conductivity
100 roach is to exploit the stress dependence of seismic wave velocity, and we have investigated this in
101 els, such as three-dimensional variations of seismic wave velocity, density, and crustal thickness.
103 out 0.01 s per year in the separation of two seismic waves with differing paths through the core.
105 ns (the stresses and strains associated with seismic waves) with distance from, and magnitude of, the