地质学
润滑
索里达
打滑(空气动力学)
断层(地质)
地震学
弹性回弹理论
剪切(地质)
变形(气象学)
岩土工程
地球物理学
岩石学
走滑构造
材料科学
复合材料
物理
海洋学
热力学
合金
作者
Giacomo Pozzi,N. De Paola,S. B. Nielsen,R. E. Holdsworth,Telemaco Tesei,Manuel Thieme,Sylvie Demouchy
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41561-021-00747-8
摘要
Despite the hazard posed by earthquakes, we still lack fundamental understanding of the processes that control fault lubrication behind a propagating rupture front and enhance ground acceleration. Laboratory experiments show that fault materials dramatically weaken when sheared at seismic velocities (>0.1 m s−1). Several mechanisms, triggered by shear heating, have been proposed to explain the coseismic weakening of faults, but none of these mechanisms can account for experimental and seismological evidence of weakening. Here we show that, in laboratory experiments, weakening correlates with local temperatures attained during seismic slip in simulated faults for diverse rock-forming minerals. The fault strength evolves according to a simple, material-dependent Arrhenius-type law. Microstructures support this observation by showing the development of a principal slip zone with textures typical of sub-solidus viscous flow. We show evidence that viscous deformation (at either sub- or super-solidus temperatures) is an important, widespread and quantifiable coseismic lubrication process. The operation of these highly effective fault lubrication processes means that more energy is then available for rupture propagation and the radiation of hazardous seismic waves. Viscous deformation is a potentially prevalent mechanism of fault lubrication during earthquakes, according to laboratory experiments that simulate seismic faulting of various rock-forming minerals.
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