Ph. D. ThesisThe Mw 7.6 Chi-Chi earthquake struck Central Western Taiwan in 1999. The
rupture was complex with several dislocations along the 100-km long Chelungpu
thrust fault. Revisiting this earthquake is a challenge, as the precision and coverage
of the Earth observations available are quite poor, but it allows better understanding
of regional fault properties. Furthermore, the topographic and vegetation coverage
complexity of the area prevents coherent radar images. In this thesis, radar and
optical images, and terrestrial geodetic measurements, were utilised to study the
Chelungpu fault and more specifically the impact of the Chi-Chi earthquake.
First, five types of Earth observations were processed to investigate the co-seismic
deformation. The Particle Swarm Optimization and Okada Inversion (PSOKINV)
geodetic inversion package was used with the generalized Akaike’s Bayesian Information
Criterion (gABIC) to precisely determine the coseismic slip distribution and
relative weighting of datasets. Differences in results using the data sets jointly or
separately (e.g., under-estimation due to InSAR, inconsistencies in SPOT offsets,
smoother slip distribution with gABIC weighting) are observable. Most of the energy
was released in the northern part of the fault, where the strike veers toward
the east, and mainly at depths of less than 4 km. The PSOKINV-gABIC approach
is viable for the study of complicated cases such as the Chi-Chi earthquake (complex
fault geometry and multi-source observations) and can substantially benefit the
weight determination and physical (no overlap or gap) realism of the fault geometry.
Second, the post-seismic deformation of this event was observed using 20 years
of time series from InSAR and GPS. Then, a model of the afterslip and viscoelastic
relaxation was built. 11 years of ERS, 3 years of EnviSAT, 6 years of Sentinel-1A/B
descending and 3 years of Sentinel-1A/B ascending images were processed using
GAMMA-Remote Sensing software and atmospherically corrected using GACOS
(Generic Atmospheric Correction Online Service for InSAR). Finally, InSAR time
series were extracted and validated using GPS data. The modelling of the postseismic
deformation following the Chi-Chi earthquake was done using a power-law
Burgers rheology to analyse the interplay between afterslip and viscoelastic flow.
From the time series, a change in the ground displacement can be observed in 2004
showing a slow-down of afterslip deformation. The forward modelling of the postseismic
deformation showed that the maximum afterslip is observed on the southern
part of the fault, on the decollement in depth (while the maximum slip was happening
at shallow depth on the north section of the fault during the co-seismic
deformation). Furthermore, the study of the strain enabled me to conclude that the
interseismic phase has started over most of the area, most segments of the Chelungpu
fault are now getting locked again. More data coverage and a longer monitoring of
the Chelungpu fault will be needed to observe the entire earthquake cycleESA, UK NER
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