Refine
Year of publication
- 2010 (1195) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (668)
- Doctoral Thesis (248)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (180)
- Review (29)
- Postprint (23)
- Part of Periodical (13)
- Master's Thesis (8)
- Preprint (6)
- Working Paper (5)
- Part of a Book (4)
- Other (4)
- Conference Proceeding (2)
- Habilitation Thesis (2)
- Moving Images (2)
- Lecture (1)
Language
- English (641)
- German (511)
- Spanish (13)
- French (12)
- Italian (9)
- Multiple languages (7)
- Polish (1)
- Portuguese (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (1195) (remove)
Keywords
- Deutsche Literatur der Frühen Neuzeit (4)
- Frühe Neuzeit (4)
- Argumentationstheorie (3)
- Integration (3)
- Judaism (3)
- Judentum (3)
- Neue Ökonomische Geographie (3)
- Spracherwerb (3)
- Transportkosten (3)
- freshwater (3)
Institute
- Institut für Biochemie und Biologie (160)
- Institut für Chemie (95)
- Institut für Physik und Astronomie (90)
- Institut für Geowissenschaften (88)
- Institut für Romanistik (84)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (71)
- Historisches Institut (55)
- Institut für Informatik und Computational Science (43)
- Department Psychologie (42)
- Institut für Mathematik (35)
We present a Bayesian method that allows continuous updating the aperiodicity of the recurrence time distribution of large earthquakes based on a catalog with magnitudes above a completeness threshold. The approach uses a recently proposed renewal model for seismicity and allows the inclusion of magnitude uncertainties in a straightforward manner. Errors accounting for grouped magnitudes and random errors are studied and discussed. The results indicate that a stable and realistic value of the aperiodicity can be predicted in an early state of seismicity evolution, even though only a small number of large earthquakes has occurred to date. Furthermore, we demonstrate that magnitude uncertainties can drastically influence the results and can therefore not be neglected. We show how to correct for the bias caused by magnitude errors. For the region of Parkfield we find that the aperiodicity, or the coefficient of variation, is clearly higher than in studies which are solely based on the large earthquakes.