4.4 Article

A Spectral Boundary-Integral Method for Quasi-Dynamic Ruptures of Multiple Parallel Faults

Journal

BULLETIN OF THE SEISMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA
Volume 111, Issue 3, Pages 1614-1630

Publisher

SEISMOLOGICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.1785/0120210004

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [EAR-1848192]

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Numerical models of rupture dynamics offer insights into fault failure physics. Stress interactions among multiple faults remain numerically challenging, but this study derives elastostatic Green's functions to efficiently calculate stress interactions in the Fourier domain. The research demonstrates the method's relevance through simulations of single and multiple parallel faults' rupture dynamics under frictional control, showcasing the utility of exploring fault dynamics with many degrees of freedom.
Numerical models of rupture dynamics provide great insights into the physics of fault failure. However, resolving stress interactions among multiple faults remains challenging numerically. Here, we derive the elastostatic Green's functions for stress and displacement caused by arbitrary slip distributions along multiple parallel faults. The equations are derived in the Fourier domain, providing an efficient means to calculate stress interactions with the fast Fourier transform. We demonstrate the relevance of the method for a wide range of applications, by simulating the rupture dynamics of single and multiple parallel faults controlled by a rate- and state-dependent frictional contact, using the spectral boundary integral method and the radiation-damping approximation. Within the antiplane strain approximation, we show seismic cycle simulations with a power-law distribution of rupture sizes and, in a different parameter regime, sequences of seismogenic slow-slip events. Using the in-plane strain approximation, we simulate the rupture dynamics of a restraining stepover. Finally, we describe cycles of large earthquakes along several parallel strike-slip faults in three dimensions. The approach is useful to explore the dynamics of interacting or isolated faults with many degrees of freedom.

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