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Center for Computational Seismology
Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory
Berkeley Seismological Laboratory
University of California-Berkeley
Berkeley, California 94720
We develop an earthquake asperity model that explains previously determined
empirical scaling relationships for repeating earthquakes along the San
Andreas fault in central California. The model assumes that motion on the
fault is resisted primarily by a patch of small strong asperities that
interact with each other to increase the amount of displacement needed to
cause failure. This asperity patch is surrounded by a much weaker fault that
continually creeps in response to tectonic stress. Extending outward from the
asperity patch into the creeping part of the fault is a shadow region where a
displacement deficit exists. Starting with these basic concepts, together with
the analytical solution for the exterior crack problem, the consideration of
incremental changes in the size of the asperity patch leads to differential
equations that can be solved to yield a complete static model of an
earthquake. Equations for scalar seismic moment, the radius of the asperity
patch, and the radius of the displacement shadow are all specified as
functions of the displacement deficit that has accumulated on the asperity
patch. The model predicts that the repeat time for earthquakes should be
proportional to the scalar moment to the 1/6 power, which is in agreement with
empirical results for repeating earthquakes. The model has two free
parameters, a critical slip distance dc and a scaled
radius of a single asperity
. Numerical values of 0.20
and 0.17 cm, respectively, for these two parameters will reproduce the
empirical results, but this choice is not unique. Assuming that the asperity
patches are distributed on the fault surface in a random fractal manner leads
to a frequencysize distribution of earthquakes that agrees with the
GutenbergRichter formula and a simple relationship between the
b-value and the fractal dimension. We also show that the basic
features of the theoretical model can be simulated with numerical calculations
employing the boundary integral method.
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Asperity Models for Earthquakes Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, August 1, 2003; 93(4): 1792 - 1802. |
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