Publication | Closed Access
Experimental observation of stick-slip instability fronts
148
Citations
33
References
2009
Year
Stable Rupture FrontEngineeringFault GeologyFluid MechanicsMechanical EngineeringExperimental ObservationMechanicsEarthquake SourceSliding WearLaboratory Experimental FaultsHydrodynamic StabilityEarthquake EngineeringSeismic CycleEarthquake FaultsEarthquake RuptureExperimental TectonicsTectonicsFault GeometrySlide DynamicStructural GeologySeismologyCivil EngineeringApplied PhysicsGeomechanics
SUMMARY Stick-slip dynamic instability is a key mechanism governing frictional processes from microscale physics to earthquake faults and landslides; yet challenging questions are still open about its nucleation and propagation dynamics. Here we present novel observations on laboratory experimental faults where spontaneously nucleating fractures are produced, describing (1) an initial quasistatic, stable rupture front (propagating at about 5 per cent the shear wave velocity VS), accelerating to subshear and then to intersonic velocity; (2) the arisal of a higher degree of complexity when the friction to prestress ratio is increased on the sliding surface. The complex behaviour includes stop and go sequences, irregular propagation and rerupturing episodes within short-time intervals, implying rapid restrengthening of the surface and the formation of self-healing pulses, reproducing experimentally for the first time a behaviour observed on seismic faults.
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