Welcome to the new version of CaltechAUTHORS. Login is currently restricted to library staff. If you notice any issues, please email coda@library.caltech.edu
Published March 3, 2010 | Published
Journal Article Open

Inverting geodetic time series with a principal component analysis-based inversion method

Abstract

The Global Positioning System (GPS) system now makes it possible to monitor deformation of the Earth's surface along plate boundaries with unprecedented accuracy. In theory, the spatiotemporal evolution of slip on the plate boundary at depth, associated with either seismic or aseismic slip, can be inferred from these measurements through some inversion procedure based on the theory of dislocations in an elastic half-space. We describe and test a principal component analysis-based inversion method (PCAIM), an inversion strategy that relies on principal component analysis of the surface displacement time series. We prove that the fault slip history can be recovered from the inversion of each principal component. Because PCAIM does not require externally imposed temporal filtering, it can deal with any kind of time variation of fault slip. We test the approach by applying the technique to synthetic geodetic time series to show that a complicated slip history combining coseismic, postseismic, and nonstationary interseismic slip can be retrieved from this approach. PCAIM produces slip models comparable to those obtained from standard inversion techniques with less computational complexity. We also compare an afterslip model derived from the PCAIM inversion of postseismic displacements following the 2005 8.6 Nias earthquake with another solution obtained from the extended network inversion filter (ENIF). We introduce several extensions of the algorithm to allow statistically rigorous integration of multiple data sources (e.g., both GPS and interferometric synthetic aperture radar time series) over multiple timescales. PCAIM can be generalized to any linear inversion algorithm.

Additional Information

© 2010 by the American Geophysical Union. Received 13 April 2009; revised 24 August 2009; accepted 16 September 2009; published 3 March 2010. We thank Mohamed Chlieh, Hugo Perfettini, Ya-ju Hsu, Tapio Schneider, Malcolm Sambridge, Mark Simons, and A. Ozgun Konca for useful discussions. This study was partly funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and NSF grant EAR 0838495. Andrew Kositsky thanks the Caltech Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) program. This is Caltech Tectonics Observatory contribution 125.

Attached Files

Published - Kositsky2010p7323J_Geophys_Res-Sol_Ea.pdf

Files

Kositsky2010p7323J_Geophys_Res-Sol_Ea.pdf
Files (2.3 MB)
Name Size Download all
md5:7f268229e1999141e12e5f5e62a1e030
2.3 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023