Overview
- Editors:
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Roman Teisseyre
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Institute of Geophysics, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
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Eugeniusz Majewski
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Institute of Geophysics, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland
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Minoru Takeo
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Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
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Table of contents (39 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages I-XXIII
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Macroseismic Rotation Effects and Micromotions
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- Roman Teisseyre, Jan T. Kozák
Pages 11-23
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- Gerhard Graham, Andrzej Kijko
Pages 25-28
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Theory of Continua and Fields of Defects
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- Roman Teisseyre, Wojciech Boratyński
Pages 31-41
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- Roman Teisseyre, Mariusz Białecki, Marek Górski
Pages 43-55
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- Wojciech Boratyński, Roman Teisseyre
Pages 57-66
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- Wojciech Boratyński, Roman Teisseyre
Pages 77-89
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- Panayiotis Varotsos, Mary Lazaridou
Pages 91-111
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Rotation Motions, Seismic Source Models, and Asymmetry of Fracture
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Front Matter
Pages 129-129
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- Roman Teisseyre, Marek Górski, Krzysztof P. Teisseyre
Pages 169-183
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- Krzysztof P. Teisseyre, Jerzy Suchcicki
Pages 185-197
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- Marek Górski, Krzysztof P. Teisseyre
Pages 199-215
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About this book
When thinking, at the beginning of the new century, on our horizons in seismology, we might return to the old question related to the seismic ro- tion effects and waves. Seismology, with its spectacular achievements instrumentation, data processing, seismic tomography and source process theories – remains practically confined to linear ideal elasticity (isotropic or anisotropic). Numerous renown seismologists have tried to go beyond this horizon. As concerns rotation waves, such attempts were inspired by numerous macroscopic observations pointing out the rotation effects, often observed on the ground surface. However, this problem has been app- ently closed by Mallet in 1862, who gave the following explanation: ro- tions of a body on the surface are due to a sequence of impacts of different seismic phases emerging under different angles. Later on, in 1937, I- mura underlined an influence of different inertia moments of an inflicted body. Thus, the surface rotation effects – rotation of some objects on the ground surface – were explained as being caused by the consecutive inc- nations and recovery of these objects to the vertical, when hit by the in- dent seismic body or surface waves. The final position of the object could become slightly twisted in comparison to its former place; the differences between the inertia tensor moments of the object and/or its attachment (as related to friction resistance of binding) to the ground surface play an - portant role.