Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2024 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 4–8, 2024; Minneapolis & Virtual
Session K34: Soft Earth Geophysics
3:00 PM–6:00 PM,
Tuesday, March 5, 2024
Room: 102F
Sponsoring
Units:
DSOFT GPC
Chair: Shravan Pradeep, University of Pennsylvania
Abstract: K34.00007 : Earthquake Nucleation and the Initiation of Frictional Ruptures
5:00 PM–5:12 PM
Presenter:
Shahar Gvirtzman
(Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
Authors:
Shahar Gvirtzman
(Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
Jay Fineberg
(Hebrew University of Jerusalem)
By conducting controlled nucleation experiments, in which the interface is continuously imaged, we have been able to gain a detailed description of the nucleation process. We find that the expansion of the nucleation patch is qualitatively different than the propagation of the fully formed rupture front. It occurs at extremely slow and constant velocities, and it is 2D in nature. Some of the features of this expansion, such as self-similar evolution and stress-dependent timescales, are general. However, the details of this process are governed by the local conditions at the nucleation region. Due to the slow rates of expansion, local variations in the surface toughness (the 'fracture energy') can influence characteristics such as the exact nucleation point, the shape of the patch, and the stress threshold that is needed for nucleation to occur.
As nucleation is not described by the usual frameworks that are used to explain rupture propagation, understanding the driving mechanism of it is of fundamental importance to questions ranging from earthquake nucleation and prediction to processes governing material failure. We propose a theoretical model for this mechanism, and show that it captures the unique characteristics of the nucleation process as well as the transition to dynamic rupture propagation that is described by standard fracture mechanics.
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