SCEC Award Number 11201 View PDF
Proposal Category Individual Proposal (Integration and Theory)
Proposal Title Rupture Dynamics on Multi-Segment Faults
Investigator(s)
Name Organization
Ralph Archuleta University of California, Santa Barbara
Other Participants Qiming Liu
SCEC Priorities B1, B4, A10 SCEC Groups Seismology, FARM, GMP
Report Due Date 02/29/2012 Date Report Submitted N/A
Project Abstract
Faults are usually not planar and a single earthquake often involves multiple faults (1992 Landers, 2001 Kunlun, 2002 Denali etc.). But how and why does the earthquake rupture jump between discontinuous segments remain mostly unknown. A few studies have address this problem before. Previous work put a lot of efforts on quantifying the key geometrical parameters such as step-over distances and overlapping distances with which rupture might jump from one fault to another (Harris et al, 1991; Harris and Day, 1993; Magistrale and Day, 1999). This project had 3 objectives: 1) Calculate multiple earthquake scenarios on a multi-segment fault to understand how the absolute initial stress conditions influence the rupture behavior and the resulting ground motion. 2) Investigate the geometrical conditions (degree of overlapping and step over between adjacent segments) under which a cascading earthquake can occur. 3) Study the velocity strengthening layer, its depth and its implementation. We use the finite element code MAFEM (Ma and Liu, 2006) to study the planar, rectangular faults in different kinds of tectonic settings. Although in our model the "velocity strengthening" only exists in the first couples of kilometers on the fault from the free surface, the maximum slip rates are only influenced in the shallow part, but the total slip tends to be adjusted throughout the fault. We ran a number of earthquake scenarios and investigated the nucleation by dynamic triggering on a multi-segment normal fault. We calculated the development of Coulomb stress on sub-parallel planes due to the dynamic rupture process on the main fault plane. We developed a simple proxy curve to characterize the complex temporal and spatial distribution of the Coulomb stress change field. We successfully applied the proxy TA-curve (threshold area curve) with theoretical formulas for critical length of nucleation patch to predict the initial stress level for the rupture to be triggered on adjacent fault. (Liu et al., 2011)
Intellectual Merit Real earthquakes occur on geometrically complex faults. The ability of the rupture to link different faults, vis-a-vis Landers, provides evidence that simply knowing the length of a fault does not mean one can estimate the eventual magnitude of an earthquake. Similarly, one has to consider that stress conditions are not homogeneous either along strike or down-dip. One of the most obvious variations is with material being velocity strengthening in the near surface. This research directly relates to SCEC's programs on simulation of earthquake and generation of ground motion as well as inferring magnitude statistics.
Broader Impacts How the geometry and stress conditions affect the earthquake rupture or triggering of rupture on adjacent faults determines not only the ground motion but also probabilities of earthquakes of different sizes. Both are essential to ground motion hazard maps.
Exemplary Figure Figure 3: Coulomb stress on sub-parallel faults with various separation distances calculated in a dynamic rupture simulation with depth dependent initial stress conditions. (Liu and Archuleta, 2011)