2455
0
Loading version...
🔄 Update App
🔍 Check for Updates
Test Notification
🔔 Enable Notifications
📰 Fetch NHK News
🚀 Fetch TechCrunch News
🧪 Experiment
📰 Article Management
📚 Reading List
🎤 Speaking List
📊 Statistics
💻 Software Statistics
Push Admin
Edit Reading
Back to List
Basic Information
Title
Please enter a title.
URL
Please enter a valid URL.
Date
カテゴリID
画像ファイル名
統計情報
単語数:
240語
読了回数:
0回
作成日:
2025/01/02 07:00
更新日:
2025/12/08 07:29
本文
本文
Researchers say rapidly spreading fault ruptures may have amplified the intensity of the earthquake that jolted Japan's Noto Peninsula and surrounding areas on January 1 one year ago. The government's Earthquake Research Committee says the magnitude 7.6 quake may have occurred as faults slipped in a 150-kilometer zone just north of the peninsula. Scientists analyzed data from hundreds of seismometers to examine how fault ruptures expanded in the area. They say tears initiated slowly off Suzu City at the peninsula's northeastern edge. But they estimate that some 20 seconds later, ruptures started to propagate at a velocity of roughly 2 to 3 kilometers per second. The seismologists say the phenomenon may have helped intensify sliding of faults near Wajima City, a western neighbor of Suzu. They say those movements triggered shaking that emanated toward Wajima and eventually caused considerable damage. The scientists included researchers from the University of Tokyo's Earthquake Research Institute and the University of California, Los Angeles. The institute's Associate Professor Aoki Yosuke is among those on the team. Aoki notes that bedrock layers north of the peninsula are strongly stuck together over a 10-kilometer wide area. He says breaks in the layers nearby suggest that fault ruptures accelerated in the zone. Aoki says he has hardly ever observed a quake in which fault ruptures begin slowly and progress as quickly as the one in Noto. He adds that simulating various seismic patterns can help predict quake damage.
本文を入力してください。
メモ
メモ・感想
キャンセル
更新
Debug Info:
Saved State:
-
Redirected Flag:
-
Current URL:
-
Refresh
Close
Debug
Send Report
Send Report
Draw Arrow
Clear
Message:
Cancel
Send