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The marsquake catalogue from InSight, sols 0–1011

Authors :
Ceylan, Savas
Clinton, John Francis
Giardini, Domenico
Stähler, Simon Christian
Horleston, Anna
Kawamura, Taichi
Böse, Maren
Charalambous, Constantinos
Dahmen, Nikolaj Louis
van Driel, Martin
Durán, Cecilia
Euchner, Fabian
Khan, Amir
Kim, Doyeon
Plasman, Matthieu
Scholz, John‐Robert
Zenhäusern, Géraldine
Beuder, Eric
Garcia, Raphaël F.
Kedar, Sharon
Source :
Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 333
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
ETH Zurich, 2022.

Abstract

The InSight mission (Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport) has been collecting high-quality seismic data from Mars since February 2019, shortly after its landing. The Marsquake Service (MQS) is the team responsible for the prompt review of all seismic data recorded by the InSight's seismometer (SEIS), marsquake event detection, and curating seismicity catalogues. Until sol 1011 (end of September 2021), MQS have identified 951 marsquakes that we interpret to occur at regional and teleseismic distances, and 1062 very short duration events that are most likely generated by local thermal stresses nearby the SEIS package. Here, we summarize the seismic data collected until sol 1011, version 9 of the InSight seismicity catalogue. We focus on the significant seismicity that occurred after sol 478, the end date of version 3, the last catalogue described in a dedicated paper. In this new period, almost a full Martian year of new data has been collected, allowing us to observe seasonal variations in seismicity that are largely driven by strong changes in atmospheric noise that couples into the seismic signal. Further, the largest, closest and most distant events have been identified, and the number of fully located events has increased from 3 to 7. In addition to the new seismicity, we document improvements in the catalogue that include the adoption of InSight-calibrated Martian models and magnitude scales, the inclusion of additional seismic body-wave phases, and first focal mechanism solutions for three of the regional marsquakes at distances ∼30°.<br />Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 333<br />ISSN:0031-9201<br />ISSN:1872-7395

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00319201 and 18727395
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 333
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4c66bfbe996c5d6d85d49e0b44a72a56
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000579286