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Autor principal: Konishi, Tomokazu
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2025
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.15872
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author Konishi, Tomokazu
author_facet Konishi, Tomokazu
contents The Tokara Islands, a volcanic archipelago south of Japan's main islands, has experienced ongoing earthquake swarm activity in 2025, raising concerns about triggering the anticipated Nankai Trough earthquake. The Japan Meteorological Agency has dismissed this link, but the seismic activity's mechanisms remain unclear. This study uses Exploratory Data Analysis (EDA) to examine the 2025 swarm's statistical properties and compare them with historical patterns. The 2025 swarm's frequency and magnitude distributions closely resemble those of 2021 swarms, which coincided with volcanic activity at Suwanose Island, 10 km from the epicentral region, suggesting a magma-seismicity link. Statistical analysis shows a low magnitude scale (σ = 0.37) and moderate mean magnitude (μ = 2.8), consistent with magma-driven seismicity, unlike the higher σ (1.2) and μ (3.6) before the 2011 Tohoku earthquake. The exponential distribution of earthquake intervals (λ = 1/0.19 hours) further supports magma-induced activity. These findings indicate localized volcanic processes, not precursors to major tectonic events like the Nankai Trough earthquake. Statistical seismology effectively distinguishes volcanic from tectonic seismic processes for hazard assessment.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2507_15872
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Earthquake Swarm Activity in the Tokara Islands (2025): Statistical Analysis Indicates Low Probability of Major Seismic Event
Konishi, Tomokazu
Geophysics
86A32
J.2
The Tokara Islands, a volcanic archipelago south of Japan's main islands, has experienced ongoing earthquake swarm activity in 2025, raising concerns about triggering the anticipated Nankai Trough earthquake. The Japan Meteorological Agency has dismissed this link, but the seismic activity's mechanisms remain unclear. This study uses Exploratory Data Analysis (EDA) to examine the 2025 swarm's statistical properties and compare them with historical patterns. The 2025 swarm's frequency and magnitude distributions closely resemble those of 2021 swarms, which coincided with volcanic activity at Suwanose Island, 10 km from the epicentral region, suggesting a magma-seismicity link. Statistical analysis shows a low magnitude scale (σ = 0.37) and moderate mean magnitude (μ = 2.8), consistent with magma-driven seismicity, unlike the higher σ (1.2) and μ (3.6) before the 2011 Tohoku earthquake. The exponential distribution of earthquake intervals (λ = 1/0.19 hours) further supports magma-induced activity. These findings indicate localized volcanic processes, not precursors to major tectonic events like the Nankai Trough earthquake. Statistical seismology effectively distinguishes volcanic from tectonic seismic processes for hazard assessment.
title Earthquake Swarm Activity in the Tokara Islands (2025): Statistical Analysis Indicates Low Probability of Major Seismic Event
topic Geophysics
86A32
J.2
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.15872