Long-term magnetic anomalies and their possible relationship to the latest greater Chilean earthquakes in the context of the seismo-electromagnetic theory
Artículo
Open/ Download
Access note
Acceso abierto
Publication date
2021Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Cordaro Cárdenas, Enrique Guillermo
Cómo citar
Long-term magnetic anomalies and their possible relationship to the latest greater Chilean earthquakes in the context of the seismo-electromagnetic theory
Abstract
Several magnetic measurements and theoretical
developments from different research groups have shown
certain relationships with worldwide geological processes.
Secular variation in geomagnetic cutoff rigidity, magnetic
frequencies, or magnetic anomalies have been linked with
spatial properties of active convergent tectonic margins or
earthquake occurrences during recent years. These include
the rise in similar fundamental frequencies in the range of microhertz
before the Maule 2010, T¯ohoku 2011, and Sumatra–
Andaman 2004 earthquakes and the dramatic rise in the cumulative
number of magnetic anomalous peaks before several
earthquakes such as Nepal 2015 and Mexico (Puebla)
2017. Currently, all of these measurements have been physically
explained by the microcrack generation due to uniaxial
stress change in rock experiments. The basic physics of these
experiments have been used to describe the lithospheric behavior
in the context of the seismo-electromagnetic theory.
Due to the dramatic increase in experimental evidence, physical
mechanisms, and the theoretical framework, this paper
analyzes vertical magnetic behavior close to the three latest
main earthquakes in Chile: Maule 2010 (Mw 8.8), Iquique
2014 (Mw 8.2), and Illapel 2015 (Mw 8.3). The fast Fourier
transform (FFT), wavelet transform, and daily cumulative
number of anomalies methods were used during quiet space
weather time during 1 year before and after each earthquake in order to filter space influence. The FFT method confirms
the rise in the power spectral density in the millihertz range
1 month before each earthquake, which decreases to lower
values some months after earthquake occurrence. The cumulative
anomaly method exhibited an increase prior to each
Chilean earthquake (50–90 d prior to earthquakes) similar to
those found for Nepal 2015 and Mexico 2017. The wavelet
analyses also show similar properties to FFT analysis. However,
the lack of physics-based constraints in the wavelet
analysis does not allow conclusions that are as strong as those
made by FFT and cumulative methods. By using these results
and previous research, it could be stated that these magnetic
features could give seismic information about impending
events. Additionally, these results could be related to the
lithosphere–atmosphere–ionosphere coupling (LAIC effect)
and the growth of microcracks and electrification in rocks
described by the seismo-electromagnetic theory.
Patrocinador
BASAL/ANID financing, CEDENNA AFB180001
Indexation
Artículo de publícación WoS Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
Quote Item
Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci., 21, 1785–1806, 2021
Collections
The following license files are associated with this item: