Seismic moment
Seismic moment is a quantity used by seismologists to measure the size of an earthquake. The scalar seismic moment is defined by the equation
, where
- is the shear modulus of the rocks involved in the earthquake
- is the area of the rupture along the geologic fault where the earthquake occurred, and
- is the average slip on .
The seismic moment of an earthquake is typically estimated using whatever information is available to constrain its factors. For modern earthquakes, moment is usually estimated from ground motion recordings of earthquakes known as seismograms. For earthquakes that occurred in times before modern instruments were available, moment may be estimated from geologic estimates of the size of the fault rupture and the slip.
Seismic moment is the basis of the moment magnitude scale introduced by Caltech's Thomas C. Hanks and Hiroo Kanamori, which is often used to compare the size of different earthquakes and is especially useful for comparing the sizes of large earthquakes.
The seismic moment is not restricted to earthquakes. For a more general seismic source described by a seismic moment tensor, the seismic moment is