Tsunami Generation from the 2004 M=9.2 Sumatra-Andaman EarthquakeTsunami Measurements from SpaceMost instrumental measurements of tsunamis are from tide gauge stations, and more recently, bottom pressure recorders in the deep ocean. During the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami was the first time that satellites collected transects of sea-height data using radar altimetry that clearly showed a tsunami signal during its propagation across the Indian Ocean. It was by coincidence that the satellites passed over the Indian Ocean at the same time that the first part of the tsunami was propagating from the Sumatra-Andaman source region. Jason-1 yielded the best data to shed light on tsunami generation for this event: this satellite collected almost continuous sea-height data just two hours after the earthquake. Five minutes later, the Topex-Poseidon satellite (a tandem mission with Jason-1) collected intermittant sea-height data of the tsunami. The Envisat and GeoSat Follow-On (GFO) satellites captured sea-height data 3:15 and 7:10 hours after the earthquake, respectively. Because the ground speed for the Jason-1 satellite is 5.8 km/s, much faster than tsunami propagation, the data can be thought of as a snapshot of tsunami amplitudes along the Jason-1 trackline (red line below). In the computer model of the wavefield shown below, the blue arc represents the wavefront of the distant (far-field) tsunami that emanated directly from the source (i.e., sea floor deformation from movement on the inter-plate thrust). This part of the tsunami wavefield is termed the direct arrival and has almost arrived at India at this time. The smaller amplitude waves that trail behind the blue arc are an effect of dispersion, where shorter wavelength components travel at a slightly slower speed than the wavefront. The green arc represents one of many tsunami refelctions from coastlines and submerged bathymetric features that are also detected and measured by satellite radar altimetry. Jason-1 measured the height of the tsunami wave where its trackline crossed these arcs. To the east, the local tsunami continues to cause major wave action along the Sumatran coast. A more detailed depiction of the different tsunami waves (phases) is shown in the figure and animation below, viewed to the southeast. This simulation has more vertical exaggeration than the previous view to the north in order to reveal individual tsunami phases. Phases d1, d2, and d3 are direct tsunami wave arrivals from the source regions where fault slip occured along the Sumatra-Andaman subduction zone. The phases beginning with the letter r originated as reflections from various coastlines and bathymetric features.
The sea height along the Jason-1 transect is shown below. The high amplitude double peak south of the Equator is primarily the two direct arrivals from the source region (d1 and d2), although reflections from the ninety-east ridge (r1-90e), may also cross the trackline at about the same location as the d2 phase.
A stochastic slip model can be used to represent many different rupture patterns that are consistent with the frequency content observed on seismograms. Shown in the figure below is the vertical displacement of the sea floor for the slip model that best reproduces the double-peak in the Jason-1 satellite altimetry data. Possible source regions that give rise to tsunami phases d1 and d2 are labeled. Other possible sources such as secondary faulting can also explain the double peak.
Links for more information: NOAA and AVISO Comparison with the March 28, 2005 Tsunami (737 kb)
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