M 7.7 - 123 km NNW of Lucea, Jamaica
- 2020-01-28 19:10:24 (UTC)
- 19.419°N 78.756°W
- 14.9 km depth
Finite Fault
- The data below are the most preferred data available
- The data below have been reviewed by a scientist
Scientific Analysis
This updated model incorporates (1) tests for rupture velocity (3 km/s fixed Vr preferred; this model allows variation around that), (2) geometry tests and improvements (steep, WSW strike preferred), (3) depth tests (fairly insensitive to hypocenter depth; slip is shallow), and (4) improved waveform alignment. Model is largely similar to earlier version, with a significant patch of slip near hypocenter to west, and a smaller patch of slip ~160-180 km to west.
Data Process and Inversion
We analyzed 30 teleseismic broadband P waveforms, 9 broadband SH waveforms, and 44 long period surface waves selected based on data quality and azimuthal distribution. Waveforms are first converted to displacement by removing the instrument response and are then used to constrain the slip history using a finite fault inverse algorithm (Ji et al., 2002). We begin modeling using a hypocenter matching or adjusted slightly from the initial NEIC solution ( location = 19.4°N, 78.8°W; depth = 10.0 km ), and a fault plane defined using either the rapid W-Phase moment tensor (for near-real time solutions), or the gCMT moment tensor (for historic solutions).
Result
This result is based on the moment tensor nodal plane ( strike = 258.0°; dip = 88.0° ). The seismic moment release based upon this plane is 5.2e+20 N-m (Mw = 7.7) using a 1D crustal model interpolated from CRUST2.0 (Bassin et al., 2000).
Cross-section of Slip Distribution

Surface Projection

Moment Rate Function
