International audienceDuring its propagation in a rock a fracture may cross mechanical heterogeneities, which modify the stress field near the crack tip and therefore may affect the direction of propagation. Pre-existing strong (grains) and weak (pores, microcracks) defects control the final path of the fracture and the amplitude of its out-of-plane fluctuations; they may also control rupture arrest. In situ quantification of the role of heterogeneities on fracture propagation is challenging because of the technical difficulty to image the interior of a 3D medium at high spatial resolution. Here, hydraulic tension fractures were produced in 5% porosity limestone core samples, using a specially designed hydraulic cell. The 3D geometry of the...