On the Long Range Clustering of Global Seismicity and its Correlation With Solar Activity: A New Perspective for Earthquake Forecasting

Large earthquakes occurring worldwide have long been recognized to be non Poisson distributed, so involving some large scale correlation mechanism, which could be internal or external to the Earth. We have recently demonstrated this observation can be explained by the correlation of global seismicit...

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Main Authors: Vito Marchitelli, Claudia Troise, Paolo Harabaglia, Barbara Valenzano, Giuseppe De Natale
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Earth Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2020.595209/full
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spelling doaj-34e78ea8c08c42a4be10bde42be4f90c2020-11-25T03:38:34ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Earth Science2296-64632020-10-01810.3389/feart.2020.595209595209On the Long Range Clustering of Global Seismicity and its Correlation With Solar Activity: A New Perspective for Earthquake ForecastingVito Marchitelli0Vito Marchitelli1Claudia Troise2Claudia Troise3Paolo Harabaglia4Barbara Valenzano5Giuseppe De Natale6Giuseppe De Natale7Scuola di Ingegneria, Università Della Basilicata, Potenza, ItalyDepartment of Mobility, Urban Quality, Public Works, Ecology and the Environment, Puglia Region Government, Bari, ItalyIstituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Naples, ItalyCNR-INO, Pozzuoli, ItalyScuola di Ingegneria, Università Della Basilicata, Potenza, ItalyDepartment of Mobility, Urban Quality, Public Works, Ecology and the Environment, Puglia Region Government, Bari, ItalyIstituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Naples, ItalyCNR-INO, Pozzuoli, ItalyLarge earthquakes occurring worldwide have long been recognized to be non Poisson distributed, so involving some large scale correlation mechanism, which could be internal or external to the Earth. We have recently demonstrated this observation can be explained by the correlation of global seismicity with solar activity. We inferred such a clear correlation, highly statistically significant, analyzing the ISI-GEM catalog 1996–2016, as compared to the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory satellite data, reporting proton density and proton velocity in the same period. However, some questions could arise that the internal correlation of global seismicity could be mainly due to local earthquake clustering, which is a well-recognized process depending on physical mechanisms of local stress transfer. We then apply, to the ISI-GEM catalog, a simple and appropriate de-clustering procedure, meant to recognize and eliminate local clustering. As a result, we again obtain a non poissonian, internally correlated catalog, which shows the same, high level correlation with the proton density linked to solar activity. We can hence confirm that global seismicity contains a long-range correlation, not linked to local clustering processes, which is clearly linked to solar activity. Once we explain in some details the proposed mechanism for such correlation, we also give insight on how such mechanism could be used, in a near future, to help in earthquake forecasting.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2020.595209/fullworldwide earthquakessolar activitylong range correlationsolar and heliospheric observatory satelliteproton density
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vito Marchitelli
Vito Marchitelli
Claudia Troise
Claudia Troise
Paolo Harabaglia
Barbara Valenzano
Giuseppe De Natale
Giuseppe De Natale
spellingShingle Vito Marchitelli
Vito Marchitelli
Claudia Troise
Claudia Troise
Paolo Harabaglia
Barbara Valenzano
Giuseppe De Natale
Giuseppe De Natale
On the Long Range Clustering of Global Seismicity and its Correlation With Solar Activity: A New Perspective for Earthquake Forecasting
Frontiers in Earth Science
worldwide earthquakes
solar activity
long range correlation
solar and heliospheric observatory satellite
proton density
author_facet Vito Marchitelli
Vito Marchitelli
Claudia Troise
Claudia Troise
Paolo Harabaglia
Barbara Valenzano
Giuseppe De Natale
Giuseppe De Natale
author_sort Vito Marchitelli
title On the Long Range Clustering of Global Seismicity and its Correlation With Solar Activity: A New Perspective for Earthquake Forecasting
title_short On the Long Range Clustering of Global Seismicity and its Correlation With Solar Activity: A New Perspective for Earthquake Forecasting
title_full On the Long Range Clustering of Global Seismicity and its Correlation With Solar Activity: A New Perspective for Earthquake Forecasting
title_fullStr On the Long Range Clustering of Global Seismicity and its Correlation With Solar Activity: A New Perspective for Earthquake Forecasting
title_full_unstemmed On the Long Range Clustering of Global Seismicity and its Correlation With Solar Activity: A New Perspective for Earthquake Forecasting
title_sort on the long range clustering of global seismicity and its correlation with solar activity: a new perspective for earthquake forecasting
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Earth Science
issn 2296-6463
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Large earthquakes occurring worldwide have long been recognized to be non Poisson distributed, so involving some large scale correlation mechanism, which could be internal or external to the Earth. We have recently demonstrated this observation can be explained by the correlation of global seismicity with solar activity. We inferred such a clear correlation, highly statistically significant, analyzing the ISI-GEM catalog 1996–2016, as compared to the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory satellite data, reporting proton density and proton velocity in the same period. However, some questions could arise that the internal correlation of global seismicity could be mainly due to local earthquake clustering, which is a well-recognized process depending on physical mechanisms of local stress transfer. We then apply, to the ISI-GEM catalog, a simple and appropriate de-clustering procedure, meant to recognize and eliminate local clustering. As a result, we again obtain a non poissonian, internally correlated catalog, which shows the same, high level correlation with the proton density linked to solar activity. We can hence confirm that global seismicity contains a long-range correlation, not linked to local clustering processes, which is clearly linked to solar activity. Once we explain in some details the proposed mechanism for such correlation, we also give insight on how such mechanism could be used, in a near future, to help in earthquake forecasting.
topic worldwide earthquakes
solar activity
long range correlation
solar and heliospheric observatory satellite
proton density
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2020.595209/full
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