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Slow slip events are regular earthquakes

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Abstract Slow slip events usually occur downdip of seismogenic zones in subduction megathrusts and crustal faults, with rupture speeds much slower than earthquakes. The empirical moment-duration scaling relation can help constrain the physical mechanism of slow slip events, yet it is still debated whether this scaling is linear or cubic and a fundamental model unifying slow slip events and earthquakes is still lacking. Here I present numerical simulations that show that slow slip events are regular earthquakes with negligible dynamic-wave effects. A continuum of rupture speeds, from arbitrarily-slow speeds up to the S-wave speed, is primarily controlled by the stress drop and a transition slip rate above which the fault friction transitions from rate-weakening behaviour to rate-strengthening behaviour. This continuum includes tsunami earthquakes, whose rupture speeds are about one-third of the S-wave speed. These numerical simulation results are predicted by the three-dimensional theory of dynamic fracture mechanics of elongated ruptures. This fundamental model unifies slow slip events and earthquakes, reconciles the observed moment-duration scaling relations, and opens new avenues for understanding earthquakes through investigations of the kinematics and dynamics of frequently occurring slow slip events.
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Title: Slow slip events are regular earthquakes
Description:
Abstract Slow slip events usually occur downdip of seismogenic zones in subduction megathrusts and crustal faults, with rupture speeds much slower than earthquakes.
The empirical moment-duration scaling relation can help constrain the physical mechanism of slow slip events, yet it is still debated whether this scaling is linear or cubic and a fundamental model unifying slow slip events and earthquakes is still lacking.
Here I present numerical simulations that show that slow slip events are regular earthquakes with negligible dynamic-wave effects.
A continuum of rupture speeds, from arbitrarily-slow speeds up to the S-wave speed, is primarily controlled by the stress drop and a transition slip rate above which the fault friction transitions from rate-weakening behaviour to rate-strengthening behaviour.
This continuum includes tsunami earthquakes, whose rupture speeds are about one-third of the S-wave speed.
These numerical simulation results are predicted by the three-dimensional theory of dynamic fracture mechanics of elongated ruptures.
This fundamental model unifies slow slip events and earthquakes, reconciles the observed moment-duration scaling relations, and opens new avenues for understanding earthquakes through investigations of the kinematics and dynamics of frequently occurring slow slip events.

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