ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
During an earthquake, part of the released elastic strain energy is dissipated within the slip zone by frictional and fracturing processes, the rest being radiated away via elastic waves. Frictional heating thus plays a crucial role in the energy budget of earthquakes, but, to date, it cannot be resolved by seismological data. Here we investigate the dynamics of laboratory earthquakes by measuring frictional heat dissipated during the propagation of shear instabilities at typical seismogenic depth stress conditions. We perform, for the first time, the full energy budget of earthquake rupture and demonstrate that increasing the radiation efficiency, i.e. the ratio of energy radiated away via elastic waves compared to that dissipated locally, increases with increasing thermal - frictional - weakening. Using an in-situ carbon thermometer, we map frictional heating temperature heterogeneities - heat asperities - on the fault surface. Combining our microstructural, temperature and mechanical observations, we show that an increase in fault strength corresponds to a transition from a weak fault with multiple strong asperities, but little overall radiation, to a highly radiative fault, which behaves as a single strong asperity.
This article focuses on liquefaction of saturated granular soils, triggered by earthquakes. Liquefaction is definedhere as the transition from a rigid state, in which the granular soil layer supports structures placed on its surface, toa fluidlike st
The analysis of strong motion recordings in structures is crucial to understand the damaging process during earthquakes. A very precise time-frequency representation, the reassigned smoothed pseudo-Wigner-Ville method, allowed us to follow the variat
A promising perspective is presented that humans can provide hourly warning for strong land earthquakes (EQs, Ms6). Two important atmospheric electrostatic signal features are described. A table that lists 9 strong land EQs with shock time, epicenter
Low-frequency earthquakes are a particular class of slow earthquakes that provide a unique source of information on the mechanical properties of a subduction zone during the preparation of large earthquakes. Despite increasing detection of these even
We analyse the compiled set of precursory data that were reported to be available in real time before the Ms 7.5 Haicheng earthquake in Feb. 1975 and the Ms 7.6-7.8 Tangshan earthquake in July 1976. We propose a robust and simple coarse-graining meth