Ultrasonic Probing of Slow Slip Fronts in a M-scale Laboratory Fault
Description:
Strain energy accumulation within Earth’s crust provides the fuel for earthquakes. Active acoustic sensing techniques offer the opportunity to continually monitor strain fluctuations, including precursory phenomena and post seismic relaxation surrounding large earthquakes. Currently, it is poorly understood what causes P and S wave travel time and amplitude changes along a fault. We present laboratory experiments where we observe both fast and slow slip, including slow slip fronts that migrate from one end of the sample to the other. The sample consists of a 5 mm thick quartz gouge layer sheared between 760 mm long PMMA forcing blocks. Changes in the gouge layer were monitored with active source acoustics. 4 piezoelectric pulser and receiver pairs were placed incrementally along opposing sides of the fault trace. The fault geometry elevates the normal stress at the fault ends, creating localized unstable mechanical behavior with cumulative shear strain. These unstable regions initiate seismic slip at one end, and then a slow slip front propagates to the other fault end at a speed ranging from 0.1 to 10 m/s. Using the piezoelectric pulser-receiver pairs, we investigate the P and S wave arrival amplitudes as a function of on-fault slip, slip rate and shear stress drop, which all vary along the fault length. Initial results show slow slip fronts create a decrease in the P wave amplitude. Connecting ultrasonic variations with slip behavior along a m-scale laboratory fault is a step toward better discerning fault processes from active seismic methods in the earth.
Session: Predictability of Seismic and Aseismic Slip: From Basic Science to Operational Forecasts [Poster]
Type: Poster
Date: 4/16/2025
Presentation Time: 08:00 AM (local time)
Presenting Author: Joseph
Student Presenter: Yes
Invited Presentation:
Poster Number: 48
Authors
Joseph Van Linn Presenting Author jhv43@cornell.edu Cornell University |
Gregory McLaskey Corresponding Author gcm8@cornell.edu Cornell University |
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Ultrasonic Probing of Slow Slip Fronts in a M-scale Laboratory Fault
Category
Predictability of Seismic and Aseismic Slip: From Basic Science to Operational Forecasts