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Earth Science

D-Index
37
Citations
4839
World Ranking
6914
National Ranking
499

Overview

Trond Ryberg is affiliated with the University of Potsdam in Germany and has focused their academic work primarily in Earth and Planetary Sciences with a strong emphasis on Geophysics. Their research spans several interconnected subfields including Artificial Intelligence, Ocean Engineering, Environmental Chemistry, and Civil and Structural Engineering.

Their scientific contributions frequently address topics such as seismic waves and analysis, seismic imaging and inversion techniques, earthquake and tectonic studies, high-pressure geophysics and materials, seismology and earthquake studies, methane hydrates and related phenomena, and geological and geochemical analysis.

Trond Ryberg's publication record includes papers in leading scholarly journals, with repeated appearances in venues such as Geophysical Journal International, Journal of Applied Geophysics, Solid Earth, Seismological Research Letters, and Zenodo (CERN European Organization for Nuclear Research).

Recent notable papers include:

  • Anatomy of a crustal-scale accretionary complex: Insights from deep seismic sounding of the onshore western Makran subduction zone, Iran (2020, Geology)
  • Relocation of earthquakes in the southern and eastern Alps (Austria, Italy) recorded by the dense, temporary SWATH-D network using a Markov chain Monte Carlo inversion (2021, Solid Earth)
  • Combined seismic and borehole investigation of the deep granite weathering structure-Santa Gracia Reserve case in Chile (2022, Earth Surface Processes and Landforms)
  • 3-D imaging of the Balmuccia peridotite body (Ivrea-Verbano zone, NW-Italy) using controlled source seismic data (2023, Geophysical Journal International)
  • Ambient seismic noise analysis of LARGE-N data for mineral exploration in the Central Erzgebirge, Germany (2022, Solid Earth)

Collaborations have involved several frequent co-authors, indicating ongoing research partnerships. Key collaborators include:

  • Christian Haberland
  • Klaus Bauer
  • Charlotte M. Krawczyk
  • Pier Paul Overduin
  • Rahmantara Trichandi

Best Publications

  • Dynamic strain determination using fibre-optic cables allows imaging of seismological and structural features

    Philippe Jousset;Thomas Reinsch;Trond Ryberg;Hanna Blanck

  • Crustal structure and tectonics from the Los Angeles basin to the Mojave Desert, southern California

    G.S. Fuis;T. Ryberg;N.J. Godfrey;D.A. Okaya

  • P-wave mantle velocity structure beneath northern Eurasia from long-range recordings along the profile Quartz

    J. Mechie;A.V. Egorkin;K. Fuchs;T. Ryberg

  • Structure of the California Coast Ranges and San Andreas Fault at SAFOD from seismic waveform inversion and reflection imaging

    Florian Bleibinhaus;Florian Bleibinhaus;John A. Hole;Trond Ryberg;Gary S. Fuis

  • A natural and controlled source seismic profile through the Eastern Alps: TRANSALP

    J. Kummerow;R. Kind;O. Oncken;P. Giese

  • Receiver function arrays: a reflection seismic approach

    Unknown

  • The crustal structure of the Dead Sea Transform

    M. Weber;K. Abu-Ayyash;A. Abueladas

  • DEEP CRUSTAL PROFILE ACROSS THE SOUTHERN KAROO BASIN AND BEATTIE MAGNETIC ANOMALY, SOUTH AFRICA: AN INTEGRATED INTERPRETATION WITH TECTONIC IMPLICATIONS

    A. Lindeque;M.J. De Wit;T. Ryberg;M. Weber

  • Fault systems of the 1971 San Fernando and 1994 Northridge earthquakes, southern California: Relocated aftershocks and seismic images from LARSE II

    Gary S. Fuis;Robert W. Clayton;Paul M. Davis;Trond Ryberg

  • Lake Toba volcano magma chamber imaged by ambient seismic noise tomography

    Jacek Stankiewicz;Trond Ryberg;Christian Haberland;Fauzi

  • Precise location of San Andreas Fault tremors near Cholame, California using seismometer clusters: Slip on the deep extension of the fault?

    David R. Shelly;William L. Ellsworth;Trond Ryberg;Christian Haberland

  • Observation of high‐frequency teleseismic P n on the long‐range Quartz profile across northern Eurasia

    T. Ryberg;K. Fuchs;A. V. Egorkin;L. Solodilov

  • Lithology-derived structure classification from the joint interpretation of magnetotelluric and seismic models

    P. A. Bedrosian;N. Maercklin;U. Weckmann;Y. Bartov

  • Two-dimensional velocity structure beneath northern Eurasia derived from the super long-range seismic profile quartz

    T. Ryberg;F. Wenzel;J. Mechie;A. Egorkin

  • Boundary-layer mantle flow under the Dead Sea transform fault inferred from seismic anisotropy.

    Georg Rümpker;Trond Ryberg;Günter Bock

  • The Fine Structure of the Subducted Investigator Fracture Zone in Western Sumatra as Seen by Local Seismicity

    Dietrich Lange;Frederik Tilmann;Andreas Rietbrock;Rachel Collings

  • New “Fresnel-Zone” estimates for shear-wave splitting observations from finite-difference modeling

    Georg Rümpker;Trond Ryberg

  • South Atlantic opening: A plume-induced breakup?

    T. Fromm;Lars Planert;Wilfried Jokat;Trond Ryberg

  • Geophysical images of the Dead Sea Transform in Jordan reveal an impermeable barrier for fluid flow

    O. Ritter;T. Ryberg;U. Weckmann;A. Hoffmann-Rothe

  • Wave propagation in a multiple‐scattering upper mantle—observations and modelling

    Marc Tittgemeyer;Friedemann Wenzel;Karl Fuchs;Trond Ryberg

  • The San Gabriel Mountains bright reflective zone: possible evidence of young mid-crustal thrust faulting in southern California

    Trond Ryberg;Gary S. Fuis

Frequent Co-Authors

Michael E Weber
Michael E Weber University of Bonn
Christian Haberland
Christian Haberland University of Potsdam
Wilfried Jokat
Wilfried Jokat University of Bremen
Gary S. Fuis
Gary S. Fuis United States Geological Survey
Friedemann Wenzel
Friedemann Wenzel Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Marc Tittgemeyer
Marc Tittgemeyer Max Planck Society
Jan H. Behrmann
Jan H. Behrmann GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel
Karl Fuchs
Karl Fuchs Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Zvi Garfunkel
Zvi Garfunkel Hebrew University of Jerusalem
James Mechie
James Mechie University of Potsdam

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