4.8 Article

Propagation of large earthquakes as self-healing pulses or mild cracks

Journal

NATURE
Volume 591, Issue 7849, Pages 252-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03248-1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation (NSF) [EAR 1142183, 1520907]
  2. US Geological Survey [G19AP00059]
  3. Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC) [10085]
  4. NSF [EAR 1033462]
  5. US Geological Survey Cooperative Agreement [G12AC20038]
  6. Division Of Earth Sciences
  7. Directorate For Geosciences [1520907] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Observations suggest that mature faults can experience large earthquakes at much lower stress levels than expected static strength. Numerical modeling shows that quasi-statically strong faults exhibit sharp, self-healing pulse-like ruptures, while persistently weak faults result in milder, crack-like ruptures with more spread-out slip. The findings raise questions about earthquake physics and the underestimated radiated energy from large earthquakes.
Observations suggest that mature faults host large earthquakes at much lower levels of stress than their expected static strength' Potential explanations are that the faults are quasi-statically strong but experience considerable weakening during earthquakes, or that the faults are persistently weak, for example, because of fluid overpressure. Here we use numerical modelling to examine these competing theories for simulated earthquake ruptures that satisfy the well known observations of 1-10 megapascal stress drops and limited heat production. In that regime, quasi-statically strong but dynamically weak faults mainly host relatively sharp, self-healing pulse-like ruptures, with only a small portion of the fault slipping at a given time, whereas persistently weak faults host milder ruptures with more spread-out slip, which are called crack-like ruptures. We find that the sharper self-healing pulses, which exhibit larger dynamic stress changes compared to their static stress changes, result in much larger radiated energy than that inferred teleseismically for megathrust events(12). By contrast, milder crack-like ruptures on persistently weak faults, which produce comparable static and dynamic stress changes, are consistent with the seismological observations. The larger radiated energy of self-healing pulses is similar to the limited regional inferences available for crustal strike-slip faults. Our findings suggest that either large earthquakes rarely propagate as self-healing pulses, with potential differences between tectonic settings, or their radiated energy is substantially underestimated, raising questions about earthquake physics and the expected shaking from large earthquakes.

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