During 1997 several slow earthquakes have been recorded by a geodetic interferometer located beneath Gran Sasso in Central Italy. The strain rise times of the events range from tens to thousands of seconds and strain amplitudes are of the order of nanostrain. Amplitudes scale with the square root of the rise time and this suggests a diffusive behavior of the slip propagation along the fault. In this work we assume that slip diffusion is due to the presence of a gouge layer between fault faces, with a viscoplastic rheology. The fluid velocity field in the gouge layer diffuses in the directions of fault length and fault thickness, with different characteristic times. This model reproduces the relation between amplitude and rise time of measured strain signals. Synthetic straingrams, obtained for a horizontally layered flat earth and a source located at a few kilometres from the instrument, are in agreement with observed signals.
Amoruso, A., Crescentini, L., Dragoni, M., Piombo, A. (2004). Fault slip controlled by gouge rheology: a model for slow earthquakes. GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL, 159, 347-352 [10.1111/j.1365-246X.2004.02386.x].
Fault slip controlled by gouge rheology: a model for slow earthquakes
DRAGONI, MICHELE;PIOMBO, ANTONELLO
2004
Abstract
During 1997 several slow earthquakes have been recorded by a geodetic interferometer located beneath Gran Sasso in Central Italy. The strain rise times of the events range from tens to thousands of seconds and strain amplitudes are of the order of nanostrain. Amplitudes scale with the square root of the rise time and this suggests a diffusive behavior of the slip propagation along the fault. In this work we assume that slip diffusion is due to the presence of a gouge layer between fault faces, with a viscoplastic rheology. The fluid velocity field in the gouge layer diffuses in the directions of fault length and fault thickness, with different characteristic times. This model reproduces the relation between amplitude and rise time of measured strain signals. Synthetic straingrams, obtained for a horizontally layered flat earth and a source located at a few kilometres from the instrument, are in agreement with observed signals.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.