Focal Mechanism Explorer

Interactive Educational Beachball Visualization Tool
Strike °
Direction of fault trace from north (0-360°)
Dip °
Angle of fault plane from horizontal (0-90°)
Rake °
Direction of slip on fault plane (-180 to 180°)
Source Type (Moment Tensor)
ISO (Isotropic) %
Volume change: +explosion / −implosion
CLVD %
Compensated linear vector dipole
DC (Double-Couple) 100%
DC = 100 − |ISO| − |CLVD| (derived)
Depth (affects station takeoff angles) km
Depth:
0 33 70 150 300 500 700km
Fault Type
Strike-slip
Magnitude
5.0
P-axis (compression)
T-axis (tension)
About Fault Types
Select a preset to learn about different fault types and see their characteristic beachball patterns.
Stations (0)
No stations added yet
Depth: 10 km | Legend: ● UP ○ DOWN ◐ ?
Takeoff angles use a simplified 1-D model. For research-grade polarity analysis, use ray-tracing through IASP91 or AK135.
Fault Cross-Section
■ Hanging Wall ■ Footwall
Earthquake Map Tectonic Plates
Understanding Focal Mechanisms
Click to set strike
Strike-slip
The beachball diagram shows the orientation of fault motion during an earthquake. Black quadrants represent compression (P-wave first motion pushes away), while white quadrants represent tension (P-wave first motion pulls toward source).
Which Plane is the Fault?
Nodal Plane 1:
Strike: 0° | Dip: 45° | Rake: 0°
Nodal Plane 2 (Auxiliary):
Strike: 90° | Dip: 90° | Rake: 180°

Click to select the fault plane. The cross-section and block diagram will update. How is Plane 2 calculated? →

P and T Axes

P-axis (blue): Maximum compression direction

T-axis (red): Maximum tension direction

The P and T axes bisect the angles between the nodal planes. Their orientations reveal the regional stress field that caused the earthquake.

Source Type (Hudson Plot)
Click on the diagram to set ISO/CLVD values
Source Type Examples
Moment Tensor
Eigenvalues
Key Concepts

Double-couple: Most earthquakes occur on planar faults and produce this characteristic four-quadrant pattern.

Auxiliary plane: Each beachball has two possible fault planes - additional data (aftershocks, surface rupture) determines which actually slipped.

P-Wave First Motion
Stations in compression quadrants see initial UP motion. Stations in tension quadrants see initial DOWN motion.
Famous Examples