Rheological Transitions Facilitate Fault-Spanning Ruptures on Seismically Active and Creeping Faults

Publication date

2020-08

Authors

van den Ende, M.P.A.ISNI 0000000436396887
Chen, JianyeISNI 0000000449450942
Niemeijer, A.R.ISNI 0000000436376624
Ampuero Saenz, J.P.ISNI 000000038271368X

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Physical constraints on the seismogenic potential of major fault zones may aid in improving seismic hazard assessments, but the mechanics of earthquake nucleation and rupture are obscured by the complexity that faults display. In this work, we investigate the mechanisms behind giant earthquakes by employing a microphysically based seismic cycle simulator. This microphysical approach is directly based on the mechanics of friction as inferred from laboratory tests and can explain a broad spectrum of fault slip behavior. We show that regular earthquakes are controlled by the size and distribution of (nominally) frictionally unstable asperities, whereas fault-spanning earthquakes are governed by a rheological transition occurring in creeping fault segments. Moreover, this facilitates the nucleation of giant earthquakes on faults that are weakly seismically coupled (i.e., creeping). This microphysically based approach offers opportunities for investigating long-term seismic cycle behavior of natural faults.

Keywords

fault heterogeneity, microphysical modeling, seismic cycle simulations, Geophysics, Geochemistry and Petrology, Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous), Space and Planetary Science

Citation

van den Ende, M P A, Chen, J, Niemeijer, A R & Ampuero, J P 2020, 'Rheological Transitions Facilitate Fault-Spanning Ruptures on Seismically Active and Creeping Faults', Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, vol. 125, no. 8, e2019JB019328. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019JB019328