Title
On scaling of fracture energy and stress drop in dynamic rupture models: Consequences for near-source ground-motions
Date Issued
01 January 2006
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
book part
Author(s)
Mai P.
Somerville P.
Pitarka A.
Song S.
Beroza G.
Miyake H.
Irikura K.
San Diego State University
Publisher(s)
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract
We calculate spontaneous dynamic rupture models for several well-recorded moderate to large earthquakes and analyze the scaling properties of fracture energy and stress drop. Among the set of 12 source models for 9 different earthquakes, the large events did break the surface while the moderate-size events occurred as completely buried ruptures (i.e. no surface faulting). We find that dynamic and static stress drop differ by only about 10%. Fault-averaged stress drop increases with increasing earthquake magnitude, while also fault-averaged (or maximum) fracture energy grows with magnitude. The scaling of fracture energy with the stress intensity factor appears to be sensitive to whether or not the earthquake rupture broke the surface, indicating that large earthquakes consume more fracture energy as the rupture expands and reaches the surface. This scaling of fracture energy may shed light on the recent observation that large, surface breaking earthquakes apparently generate lower near-source ground motions than buried ruptures in a certain period range of engineering interest. The derived empirical scaling relations for fracture energy may help to constrain the initial conditions for future dynamic rupture modeling, but can also be used in physics-based source characterization for near-source groundmotion calculations.
Start page
283
End page
293
Volume
170
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Geología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84975802533
Source
Geophysical Monograph Series
ISSN of the container
00658448
ISBN of the container
9781118666272
Source funding
Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule Zürich
Sponsor(s)
Acknowledgements. This work was sponsored by the Japanese nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, Japan (Hoan-In), as well as the Ec-Project rELIEF (EVG1-cT-2002-00069) (PMM). We thank A. McGarr, r. Abercrombie and H. Kanamori for organiz - ing the 2005 chapman conference on radiated Seismic Energy, a stimulating environment where this work was presented. Associate editor H. Kanamori, David oglesby and Brad Aagaard provided constructive criticism that helped to improve the paper. This is contribution #1447 of the Institute of Geophysics, ETH Zurich. This work was sponsored by the Japanese Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, Japan (Hoan-In), as well as the Ec-Project rELIEF (EVG1-cT-2002-00069) (PMM). We thank A. McGarr, R. Abercrombie and H. Kanamori for organizing the 2005 chapman conference on radiated Seismic Energy, a stimulating environment where this work was presented. Associate editor H. Kanamori, David oglesby and Brad Aagaard provided constructive criticism that helped to improve the paper. This is contribution #1447 of the Institute of Geophysics, ETH Zurich.
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