nkysdb: 共著者関連データベース
YOSHIDA Keisuke 様の 共著関連データベース
+(A list of literatures under single or joint authorship with "YOSHIDA Keisuke")
共著回数と共著者名 (a list of the joint author(s))
12: YOSHIDA Keisuke
10: HASEGAWA Akira
8: OKADA Tomomi
2: FUKUYAMA Eiichi, ITO Yoshihiro, NAKAJIMA Junichi, YOSHIDA Takeyoshi
1: Group for the aftershock observations of the 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake, IIO Yoshihisa, IWASAKI Takaya, KATAO Hiroshi, KOSUGA Masahiro, KUBO Atsuki, MATSUMOTO Takumi, MATSUSHIMA Takeshi, MATSUZAWA Toru, MIYAMACHI Hiroki, MUTO Jun, PULIDO Nelson, SAITO Tatsuhiko, SAWAZAKI Kaoru, SHIBAZAKI Bunichiro, TAKAHASHI Hiroaki, TANAKA Sachiko, UCHIDA Naoki, UEKI Sadato, UMINO Norihito, URATA Yumi, YAMANAKA Yoshiko
発行年とタイトル (Title and year of the issue(s))
2011: Nearly complete stress drop in the 2011 Mw 9.0 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake
2011: Shallow inland earthquakes in NE Japan possibly triggered by the 2011 off the Pacific coast of Tohoku Earthquake
2012: Change in stress field after the 2011 great Tohoku Oki earthquake
2012: Stress before and after the 2011 great Tohoku oki earthquake and induced earthquakes in inland areas of eastern Japan
2013: An intraslab seismic sequence activated by the 2011 Tohoku oki earthquake: Evidence for fluid related embrittlement
2014: Changes in the stress field after the 2008 M7.2 Iwate Miyagi Nairiku earthquake in northeastern Japan
2014: Pore pressure distribution in the focal region of the 2008 M7.2 Iwate Miyagi Nairiku earthquake
2015: Spatial variation of stress orientations in NE Japan revealed by dense seismic observations
2016: Heterogeneous stress state of island arc crust in northeastern Japan affected by hot mantle fingers
2016: Stress rotations due to the M6.5 foreshck and M7.3 mainshock in the 2016 Kumamoto, SW Japan, earthquake sequence
2016: Temporal variation of frictional strength in an earthquake swarm in NE Japan caused by fluid migration
2016: Unusual stress rotations within the Philippines possibly caused by slip heterogeneity along the Philippine fault