Litcius/Paper detail

High‐Frequency Seismic Events on Mars Observed by InSight

Martin van Driel, Savas Ceylan, John Clinton, Domenico Giardini, Anna Horleston, Ludovic Margerin, Simon C. Stähler, Maren Böse, Constantinos Charalambous, Taïchi Kawamura, A. Khan, G. Orhand‐Mainsant, John‐R. Scholz, F. Euchner, Martin Knapmeyer, N. C. Schmerr, W. T. Pike, Philippe Lognonné, W. B. Banerdt

2021Journal of Geophysical Research Planets69 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The seismometer deployed on the surface of Mars as part of the InSight mission ( In terior Exploration using S eismic I nvestigations, G eodesy and H eat T ransport) has recorded several hundreds of marsquakes in the first 478 sols after landing. The majority of these are classified as high‐frequency (HF) events in the frequency range from approximately 1 to 10 Hz on Mars' surface. All the HF events excite a resonance around 2.4 Hz and show two distinct but broad arrivals of seismic energy that are separated by up to 450 s. Based on the frequency content and vertical‐to‐horizontal energy ratio, the HF event family has been subdivided into three event types, two of which we show to be identical and only appear separated due to the signal‐to‐noise ratio. We show here that the envelope shape of the HF events is explained by guided Pg and Sg phases in the Martian crust using simple layered models with scattering. Furthermore, the relative travel times between these two arrivals can be related to the epicentral distance, which shows distinct clustering. The rate at which HF events are observed varies by an order of magnitude over the course of one year and cannot be explained by changes of the background noise only. The HF content and the absence of additional seismic phases constrain crustal attenuation and layering, and the coda shape constrains the diffusivity in the uppermost shallow layers of Mars.

Topics & Concepts

Mars Exploration ProgramLayeringSeismometerGeologyMartianAttenuationSeismologyEnvelope (radar)CrustCodaEvent (particle physics)Frequency bandSeismogramMagnitude (astronomy)Energy (signal processing)GeophysicsPhysicsAstrophysicsRadarAstrobiologyOpticsBandwidth (computing)BotanyQuantum mechanicsBiologyComputer networkComputer scienceTelecommunicationsPlanetary Science and ExplorationGeological and Geochemical AnalysisAstro and Planetary Science