Quantitative analysis of the Nepal earthquake on 25 April, 2015 in the perspective of future earthquake hazard

The earthquake that occurred in Nepal on 25 April, 2015 was followed by about 256 aftershocks which continued for another 20–25 days. The Coulomb stress change due to the main shock has been estimated at depths 10 km, 15 km and 22 km which justify the occurrence of about 218 aftershocks of magnitude...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mallika Mullick, Dhruba Mukhopadhyay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2017-03-01
Series:Geodesy and Geodynamics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674984717300289
id doaj-bca02eb3e58e4e40b68c40a3d7217763
record_format Article
spelling doaj-bca02eb3e58e4e40b68c40a3d72177632021-04-02T10:48:40ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Geodesy and Geodynamics1674-98472017-03-0182778310.1016/j.geog.2017.02.003Quantitative analysis of the Nepal earthquake on 25 April, 2015 in the perspective of future earthquake hazardMallika MullickDhruba MukhopadhyayThe earthquake that occurred in Nepal on 25 April, 2015 was followed by about 256 aftershocks which continued for another 20–25 days. The Coulomb stress change due to the main shock has been estimated at depths 10 km, 15 km and 22 km which justify the occurrence of about 218 aftershocks of magnitudes 4 to 5 mostly at 10 km depth and the rest of magnitudes 5 to 7.3 mostly at 15–30 km depth. The western, southern and northern fringes of the fault plane that slipped on 25 April, 2015 show a high value of positive Coulomb stress change estimated at the above mentioned depths and yet these parts of the fault remained devoid of any aftershock epicentre and therefore must be treated as seats for possible future events. Co-seismic displacement of 5 GPS stations located in Nepal after the devastating earthquake of Mw7.8 on 25 April, 2015 and its largest aftershock of Mw7.3 on 12 May, 2015 have been separately estimated and analysed.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674984717300289Nepal HimalayaAftershockPositive Coulomb stress changeCo-seismic displacementFuture earthquake
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mallika Mullick
Dhruba Mukhopadhyay
spellingShingle Mallika Mullick
Dhruba Mukhopadhyay
Quantitative analysis of the Nepal earthquake on 25 April, 2015 in the perspective of future earthquake hazard
Geodesy and Geodynamics
Nepal Himalaya
Aftershock
Positive Coulomb stress change
Co-seismic displacement
Future earthquake
author_facet Mallika Mullick
Dhruba Mukhopadhyay
author_sort Mallika Mullick
title Quantitative analysis of the Nepal earthquake on 25 April, 2015 in the perspective of future earthquake hazard
title_short Quantitative analysis of the Nepal earthquake on 25 April, 2015 in the perspective of future earthquake hazard
title_full Quantitative analysis of the Nepal earthquake on 25 April, 2015 in the perspective of future earthquake hazard
title_fullStr Quantitative analysis of the Nepal earthquake on 25 April, 2015 in the perspective of future earthquake hazard
title_full_unstemmed Quantitative analysis of the Nepal earthquake on 25 April, 2015 in the perspective of future earthquake hazard
title_sort quantitative analysis of the nepal earthquake on 25 april, 2015 in the perspective of future earthquake hazard
publisher KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
series Geodesy and Geodynamics
issn 1674-9847
publishDate 2017-03-01
description The earthquake that occurred in Nepal on 25 April, 2015 was followed by about 256 aftershocks which continued for another 20–25 days. The Coulomb stress change due to the main shock has been estimated at depths 10 km, 15 km and 22 km which justify the occurrence of about 218 aftershocks of magnitudes 4 to 5 mostly at 10 km depth and the rest of magnitudes 5 to 7.3 mostly at 15–30 km depth. The western, southern and northern fringes of the fault plane that slipped on 25 April, 2015 show a high value of positive Coulomb stress change estimated at the above mentioned depths and yet these parts of the fault remained devoid of any aftershock epicentre and therefore must be treated as seats for possible future events. Co-seismic displacement of 5 GPS stations located in Nepal after the devastating earthquake of Mw7.8 on 25 April, 2015 and its largest aftershock of Mw7.3 on 12 May, 2015 have been separately estimated and analysed.
topic Nepal Himalaya
Aftershock
Positive Coulomb stress change
Co-seismic displacement
Future earthquake
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1674984717300289
work_keys_str_mv AT mallikamullick quantitativeanalysisofthenepalearthquakeon25april2015intheperspectiveoffutureearthquakehazard
AT dhrubamukhopadhyay quantitativeanalysisofthenepalearthquakeon25april2015intheperspectiveoffutureearthquakehazard
_version_ 1724166820659724288