Laboratory experiments demonstrate that prior to fast laboratory earthquakes the fault begins to unlock and creep, causing foreshocks to coalesce in both space and time. This demonstrates that the evolution of foreshocks is closely connected to the fault slip velocity.Understanding the connection between seismic activity and the earthquake nucleation process is a fundamental goal in earthquake seismology with important implications for earthquake early warning systems and forecasting. We use high-resolution acoustic emission (AE) waveform measurements from laboratory stick-slip experiments that span a spectrum of slow to fast slip rates to probe spatiotemporal properties of laboratory foreshocks and nucleation processes. We measure waveform similarity and pairwise differential travel-times (DTT) between AEs throughout the seismic cycle. AEs broadcasted prior to slow labquakes have small DTT and high waveform similarity relative to fast labquakes. We show that during slow stick-slip, the fault never fully locks, and waveform similarity and pairwise differential travel times do not evolve throughout the seismic cycle. In contrast, fast laboratory earthquakes are preceded by a rapid increase in waveform similarity late in the seismic cycle and a reduction in differential travel times, indicating that AEs begin to coalesce as the fault slip velocity increases leading up to failure. These observations point to key differences in the nucleation process of slow and fast labquakes and suggest that the spatiotemporal evolution of laboratory foreshocks is linked to fault slip velocity.

Foreshock properties illuminate nucleation processes of slow and fast laboratory earthquakes / Bolton, David C; Marone, Chris; Saffer, Demian; Trugman, Daniel T. - In: NATURE COMMUNICATIONS. - ISSN 2041-1723. - 14:(2023). [10.1038/s41467-023-39399-0]

Foreshock properties illuminate nucleation processes of slow and fast laboratory earthquakes

Marone, Chris
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
2023

Abstract

Laboratory experiments demonstrate that prior to fast laboratory earthquakes the fault begins to unlock and creep, causing foreshocks to coalesce in both space and time. This demonstrates that the evolution of foreshocks is closely connected to the fault slip velocity.Understanding the connection between seismic activity and the earthquake nucleation process is a fundamental goal in earthquake seismology with important implications for earthquake early warning systems and forecasting. We use high-resolution acoustic emission (AE) waveform measurements from laboratory stick-slip experiments that span a spectrum of slow to fast slip rates to probe spatiotemporal properties of laboratory foreshocks and nucleation processes. We measure waveform similarity and pairwise differential travel-times (DTT) between AEs throughout the seismic cycle. AEs broadcasted prior to slow labquakes have small DTT and high waveform similarity relative to fast labquakes. We show that during slow stick-slip, the fault never fully locks, and waveform similarity and pairwise differential travel times do not evolve throughout the seismic cycle. In contrast, fast laboratory earthquakes are preceded by a rapid increase in waveform similarity late in the seismic cycle and a reduction in differential travel times, indicating that AEs begin to coalesce as the fault slip velocity increases leading up to failure. These observations point to key differences in the nucleation process of slow and fast labquakes and suggest that the spatiotemporal evolution of laboratory foreshocks is linked to fault slip velocity.
2023
friction; earthquakes; forecasting method
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Foreshock properties illuminate nucleation processes of slow and fast laboratory earthquakes / Bolton, David C; Marone, Chris; Saffer, Demian; Trugman, Daniel T. - In: NATURE COMMUNICATIONS. - ISSN 2041-1723. - 14:(2023). [10.1038/s41467-023-39399-0]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1687604
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