In the framework of S3 project \"Short term earthquake forecasting\" supported by Department of Civil Protection (DPC) and National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV), a magnetotelluric (MT) station was installed in the Pollino area (southern Italy) during September 2012 by the Institute of Methodologies for Environmental Analysis (IMAA-CNR, Italy) in order to investigate possible correlation between electromagnetic signals and seismicity. For the last two years Pollino area has been characterized by swarm-type seismicity, culminating with the earthquake occurred on October 25, 2012 of magnitude MW=5.0. After the mainshock, the INGV installed a seismic station close to the MT station. In this paper, we focus the analysis on the largest event (ML=3.6) recorded during the colocated electromagnetic and seismic experiment. We applied time-frequency misfit criteria based on the continuous Morlet wavelet transform to compare the electric and seismic homologous components: this analysis confirms an overall good waveform similarity between the signals, but also some interesting differences in amplitude for frequencies above 1 Hz in correspondence of the arrival of particular seismic phases that need further investigations.
The Pollino 2011-2012 seismic swarm (southern Italy): first results of the ML=3.6 aftershock recorded by co-located electromagnetic and seismic stations
Abstract: