A. Horleston, J. Clinton, S. Ceylan, D. Giardini, C. Charalambous, J. Irving, P. Lognonné, S. Stähler, G. Zenhäusern, N. Dahmen, C. Durán, T. Kawamura, Amir Khan, Doyeon Kim, M. Plasman, F. Euchner, C. Beghein, É. Beucler, Quancheng Huang, M. Knapmeyer, B. Knapmeyer‐Endrun, V. Lekić, Jiaqi Li, C. Perrin, M. Schimmel, N. Schmerr, A. Stott, É. Stutzmann, N. Teanby, Zongbo Xu, M. Panning, W. Banerdt
{"title":"The Far Side of Mars: Two Distant Marsquakes Detected by InSight","authors":"A. Horleston, J. Clinton, S. Ceylan, D. Giardini, C. Charalambous, J. Irving, P. Lognonné, S. Stähler, G. Zenhäusern, N. Dahmen, C. Durán, T. Kawamura, Amir Khan, Doyeon Kim, M. Plasman, F. Euchner, C. Beghein, É. Beucler, Quancheng Huang, M. Knapmeyer, B. Knapmeyer‐Endrun, V. Lekić, Jiaqi Li, C. Perrin, M. Schimmel, N. Schmerr, A. Stott, É. Stutzmann, N. Teanby, Zongbo Xu, M. Panning, W. Banerdt","doi":"10.1785/0320220007","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n For over three Earth years the Marsquake Service has been analyzing the data sent back from the Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure—the seismometer placed on the surface of Mars by NASA’s InSight lander. Although by October 2021, the Mars seismic catalog included 951 events, until recently all these events have been assessed as lying within a radius of 100° of InSight. Here we report two distant events that occurred within days of each other, located on the far side of Mars, giving us our first glimpse into Mars’ core shadow zone. The first event, recorded on 25 August 2021 (InSight sol 976), shows clear polarized arrivals that we interpret to be PP and SS phases at low frequencies and locates to Valles Marineris, 146° ± 7° from InSight. The second event, occurring on 18 September 2021 (sol 1000), has significantly more broadband energy with emergent PP and SS arrivals, and a weak phase arriving before PP that we interpret as Pdiff. Considering uncertain pick times and poorly constrained travel times for Pdiff, we estimate this event is at a distance between 107° and 147° from InSight. With magnitudes of MwMa 4.2 and 4.1, respectively, these are the largest seismic events recorded so far on Mars.","PeriodicalId":273018,"journal":{"name":"The Seismic Record","volume":"457 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"29","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The Seismic Record","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1785/0320220007","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 29
Abstract
For over three Earth years the Marsquake Service has been analyzing the data sent back from the Seismic Experiment for Interior Structure—the seismometer placed on the surface of Mars by NASA’s InSight lander. Although by October 2021, the Mars seismic catalog included 951 events, until recently all these events have been assessed as lying within a radius of 100° of InSight. Here we report two distant events that occurred within days of each other, located on the far side of Mars, giving us our first glimpse into Mars’ core shadow zone. The first event, recorded on 25 August 2021 (InSight sol 976), shows clear polarized arrivals that we interpret to be PP and SS phases at low frequencies and locates to Valles Marineris, 146° ± 7° from InSight. The second event, occurring on 18 September 2021 (sol 1000), has significantly more broadband energy with emergent PP and SS arrivals, and a weak phase arriving before PP that we interpret as Pdiff. Considering uncertain pick times and poorly constrained travel times for Pdiff, we estimate this event is at a distance between 107° and 147° from InSight. With magnitudes of MwMa 4.2 and 4.1, respectively, these are the largest seismic events recorded so far on Mars.
在过去的三个地球年里,火星地震服务中心一直在分析从内部结构地震实验发回的数据,该实验是由美国宇航局的洞察号着陆器放置在火星表面的地震仪。虽然到2021年10月,火星地震目录包括951个事件,但直到最近,所有这些事件都被评估为位于洞察号100°半径范围内。在这里,我们报告了两个相隔几天的遥远事件,它们位于火星的远端,让我们第一次看到了火星的核心阴影区。第一次事件记录于2021年8月25日(InSight sol 976),显示出清晰的极化到达,我们将其解释为低频PP和SS相位,位于距InSight 146°±7°的水手谷。第二个事件发生在2021年9月18日(sol 1000),随着紧急PP和SS的到来,宽带能量明显增加,并且在PP之前到达一个弱相位,我们将其解释为Pdiff。考虑到Pdiff的不确定拾取时间和较差的旅行时间限制,我们估计该事件与InSight的距离在107°到147°之间。这两次地震的震级分别为4.2和4.1,是迄今为止在火星上记录到的最大地震事件。