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The Multifractal Stress-Activated (MSA) model is a statistical model of triggered seismicity based on mechanical and thermodynamic principles. It predicts that, above a triggering magnitude cut-off $M_0$, the exponent $p$ of the Omori law for the seismic decay of aftershocks is a linear increasing function $p(M) =a M+b$ of the main shock magnitude $M$. We previously reported empirical support for this prediction, using the Southern California SCEC catalog. Here, we confirm this law using an updated, longer version of the same catalog, as well as new methods to estimate $p$. One of this methods is the newly defined Scaling Function Analysis, adapted from the wavelet transform. This method is able to measure a singularity ($p$-value), erasing the possible regular part of a time series. The Scaling Function Analysis also proves particularly efficient to reveal the coexistence of several types of relaxation laws (typical Omori sequences and short-lived swarms sequences) which can be mixed within the same catalog. The same methods are used on data from the worlwide Harvard CMT and show results compatible with those of Southern California. For the Japanese JMA catalog, we still observe a linear dependence of $p$ on $M$, yet with a smaller slope. The scaling function analysis shows however that results for this catalog may be biased by numerous swarm sequences, despite our efforts to remove them before the analysis.
Plate motions are governed by equilibrium between basal and edge forces. Great earthquakes may induce differential static stress changes across tectonic plates, enabling a new equilibrium state. Here we consider the torque balance for idealized circu
A likely source of earthquake clustering is static stress transfer between individual events. Previous attempts to quantify the role of static stress for earthquake triggering generally considered only the stress changes caused by large events, and o
We present the condensation method that exploits the heterogeneity of the probability distribution functions (PDF) of event locations to improve the spatial information content of seismic catalogs. The method reduces the size of seismic catalogs whil
We consider a general stochastic branching process, which is relevant to earthquakes as well as to many other systems, and we study the distributions of the total number of offsprings (direct and indirect aftershocks in seismicity) and of the total n
We propose a new physically-based ``multifractal stress activation model of earthquake interaction and triggering based on two simple ingredients: (i) a seismic rupture results from activated processes giving an exponential dependence on the local st