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re: 6.7 magnitude earthquake has hit 25 miles south of British Columbia
Posted on 4/23/14 at 11:56 pm to lsu480
Posted on 4/23/14 at 11:56 pm to lsu480
quote:
The magnitude scale is really comparing amplitudes of waves on a seismogram, not the STRENGTH (energy) of the quakes. So, a magnitude 8.7 is 794 times bigger than a 5.8 quake as measured on seismograms, but the 8.7 quake is about 23,000 times STRONGER than the 5.8! Since it is really the energy or strength that knocks down buildings, this is really the more important comparison. This means that it would take about 23,000 quakes of magnitude 5.8 to equal the energy released by one magnitude 8.7 event. Here's how we get that number:
One whole unit of magnitude represents approximately 32 times (actually 10**1.5 times) the energy, based on a long-standing empirical formula that says log(E) is proportional to 1.5M, where E is energy and M is magnitude. This means that a change of 0.1 in magnitude is about 1.4 times the energy release. Therefore, using the shortcut shown eartlier for the amplitude calculation, the energy is,
32 * 32 * 32 / 1.4 = 23,405 or about 23,000
The actual formula would be:
((10**1.5)**8.7)/((10**1.5)**5.8) = 10**(1.5*(8.7-5.8))
= 10**(1.5*2.9)
= 22,387
This explains why big quakes are so much more devastating than small ones. The amplitude ("size") differences are big enough, but the energy ("strength") differences are huge. The amplitude numbers are neater and a little easier to explain, which is why those are used more often in publications. But it's the energy that does the damage.
Earthquake calculator
LINK
A magnitude 9 earthquake is 1000 times bigger than a magnitude 6 earthquake on a seismogram, but is 31622.776 times stronger (energy release).
This post was edited on 4/23/14 at 11:56 pm
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