79 research outputs found
Geoelectric field and seismicity changes preceding the 2018 Mw6.8 earthquake and the subsequent activity in Greece
A strong earthquake of magnitude Mw6.8 struck Western Greece on 25 October
2018 with epicenter at 37.515N 20.564E. It was preceded by an anomalous
geolectric signal that was recorded on 2 October 2018 at a measuring station
70km away from the epicenter. Upon analyzing this signal in natural time, we
find that it conforms to the conditions suggested (e.g., Entropy 19 (2017) 177)
for its identification as precursory Seismic Electric Signal (SES) activity.
Notably, the observed lead time of 23 days lies within the range of values that
has been very recently identified (Entropy 20 (2018) 561) as being
statistically significant for the precursory variations of the electric field
of the Earth. Moreover, the analysis in natural time of the seismicity
subsequent to the SES activity in the area candidate to suffer this strong
earthquake reveals that the criticality conditions were obeyed early in the
morning of 18 October 2018, i.e., almost a week before the strong earthquake
occurrence, in agreement with earlier findings. Furthermore, upon employing the
recent method of nowcasting earthquakes, which is based on natural time, we
find an earthquake potential score around 80% just before the occurrence of
this Mw6.8 earthquake. In the present version of this manuscript, we also
report the recording of additional SES activities after the occurrence of the
latter earthquake and update the results until 16 April 2019.Comment: 10 pages including 12 figures. The major part of this paper appeared
in Entropy 20 (2018) 882 by the first two author
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