Published August 16, 2016 | Version Published + Supplemental Material
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Evidence for Universal Earthquake Rupture Initiation Behavior

Abstract

Earthquake onsets provide a unique opportunity to study physical rupture processes because they are more easily observable than later rupture stages. Despite this relative simplicity, the observational basis for rupture onsets is unclear. Numerous reports of evidence for magnitude-dependent rupture onsets (which imply deterministic rupture behavior, e.g. Colombelli et al., 2014) stand in contradiction to a large body of physics-based rupture modeling efforts, which are mostly based on inherently non-deterministic principles (e.g. Rice, 1993). Here we make use of the abundance of short-distance recordings available today; a magnitude-dependency of onsets should appear most prominently in such recordings. We use a simple method to demonstrate that all ruptures in the studied magnitude range (4 < M < 8) share a universal initial rupture behavior and discuss ensuing implications for physical rupture processes and earthquake early warning.

Additional Information

©2016. American Geophysical Union. Received 18 JUN 2016. Accepted 26 JUL 2016. Accepted article online 29 JUL 2016. Published online 14 AUG 2016. We are grateful to Hiroo Kanamori, Nadia Lapusta, Jean-Paul Ampuero, Nicolas Deichmann, Shunta Noda, Yannik Behr, Alice Gabriel, Stephen Perry, and Natalie Higgins for discussions that helped to advance this project, and to Chaoyong Peng for the help with the Wenchuan earthquake data. This work was partly funded by ETH Zurich ETHIIRA grant ETH-22 10-3. The Japanese waveform data can be downloaded from http://www.kik.bosai.go.jp/ (last accessed August 2015). We used the Seismic Transfer Program tool from http://scedc.caltech.edu/research-tools/ stp-index.html (last accessed September 2014) to retrieve Southern California waveform, catalog, and arrival time data. The Next Generation Attenuation-West 1 waveform and metadata were obtained from http://peer.berkeley.edu (last accessed March 2014). The Wenchuan record was obtained from http://222.222.119.9/index.asp (last accessed June 2015). The SBPx-algorithm was published as SBPx.m on mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/ (last accessed July 2015).

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Published - Meier_et_al-2016-Geophysical_Research_Letters.pdf

Supplemental Material - grl54797-sup-0001-2016GL070081-SI.docx

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Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
69301
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20160729-091315832

Funding

ETH Zurich
ETH-22 10-3

Dates

Created
2016-07-29
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2021-11-11
Created from EPrint's last_modified field

Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
Seismological Laboratory, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS)