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Main Authors: Bizzarri, Andrea, Petri, Alberto, Baldassarri, Andrea
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.10595
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author Bizzarri, Andrea
Petri, Alberto
Baldassarri, Andrea
author_facet Bizzarri, Andrea
Petri, Alberto
Baldassarri, Andrea
contents The traction evolution is a fundamental ingredient to model the dynamics of an earthquake rupture which ultimately controls, during the coseismic phase, the energy release, the stress redistribution and the consequent excitation of seismic waves. In the present paper we explore the use of the friction behavior derived from laboratory shear experiments performed on granular materials at low normal stress. We find that the rheological properties emerging from these laboratory experiments can not be described in terms of preexisting governing models already presented in literature; our results indicate that neither rate-and state-dependent friction laws nor nonlinear slip-dependent models, commonly adopted for modeling earthquake ruptures, are able to capture all the features of the experimental data. Then, by exploiting a novel numerical approach, we directly incorporate the laboratory data into a code to simulate the fully dynamic propagation of a 3-D slip failure. We demonstrate that the rheology of the granular material, imposed as fault boundary condition, is dynamically consistent. Indeed, it is able to reproduce the basic features of a crustal earthquake, spontaneously accelerating up to some terminal rupture speed, both sub- and supershear.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2401_10595
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Earthquake dynamics constrained from laboratory experiments: new insights from granular materials
Bizzarri, Andrea
Petri, Alberto
Baldassarri, Andrea
Geophysics
The traction evolution is a fundamental ingredient to model the dynamics of an earthquake rupture which ultimately controls, during the coseismic phase, the energy release, the stress redistribution and the consequent excitation of seismic waves. In the present paper we explore the use of the friction behavior derived from laboratory shear experiments performed on granular materials at low normal stress. We find that the rheological properties emerging from these laboratory experiments can not be described in terms of preexisting governing models already presented in literature; our results indicate that neither rate-and state-dependent friction laws nor nonlinear slip-dependent models, commonly adopted for modeling earthquake ruptures, are able to capture all the features of the experimental data. Then, by exploiting a novel numerical approach, we directly incorporate the laboratory data into a code to simulate the fully dynamic propagation of a 3-D slip failure. We demonstrate that the rheology of the granular material, imposed as fault boundary condition, is dynamically consistent. Indeed, it is able to reproduce the basic features of a crustal earthquake, spontaneously accelerating up to some terminal rupture speed, both sub- and supershear.
title Earthquake dynamics constrained from laboratory experiments: new insights from granular materials
topic Geophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.10595