Title of article :
Multiscale Brittle-Ductile Coupling and Genesis of Slow Earthquakes
Author/Authors :
K. Regenauer-Lieb، نويسنده , , D. A. Yuen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
We present the first attempt to explain slow earthquakes as cascading thermal-mechanical
instabilities. To attain this goal we investigate brittle-ductile coupled thermal-mechanical simulation on vastly
different time scales. The largest scale model consists of a cross section of a randomly perturbed elasto-viscoplastic
continental lithosphere on the order of 100 9 100 km scale with no other initial structures. The smallest
scale model investigates a km-scale subsection of the large model and has a local resolution of 40 9 40 m. The
model is subject to a constant extension velocity applied on either side. We assume a free top surface and with a
zero tangential stress along the other boundaries. Extension is driven by velocity boundary conditions of 1 cm/a
applied on either side of the model. This is the simplest boundary condition, and makes it an ideal starting point
for understanding the behavior of a natural system with multiscale brittle-ductile coupling. Localization
feedback is observed as faulting in the brittle upper crust and ductile shearing in an elasto-viscoplastic lower
crust. In this process brittle faulting may rupture at seismogenic rates, e.g., at 102–103 ms-1, whereas viscous
shear zones propagate at much slower rates, up to 3 9 10-9 ms-1. This sharp contrast in the strain rates leads to
complex short-time-scale interactions at the brittle-ductile transition. We exploit the multiscale capabilities from
our new simulations for understanding the underlying thermo-mechanics, spanning vastly different, time- and
length-scales.
Keywords :
Fast instabilities , slow earthquakes , Numerical modelling , Rheology , brittle-ductile transition.
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics