Geodetic observations and large-scale laboratory experiments show that seismic instability is preceded by slow slip within a finite nucleation zone. In laboratory experiments rupture nucleation is studied mostly using bare (rock) interfaces, whereas upper crustal faults are typically filled with gouge. To investigate effects of gouge on rupture nucleation, we performed a biaxial shearing experiment on a 350 mm long saw-cut fault filled with gypsum gouge, at room temperature and a minimum horizontal stress σ2 = 0.3–5 MPa. The gouge layer was sandwiched between polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) plates For reference also a fault without gouge was deformed. Strain gauges and Digital Image Correlation were used to monitor the deformation field along...
Earthquake simulation and hazard prediction are strongly hampered by insufficient physical knowledge...
Recent GPS observations of major earthquakes such as the 2014 Chile megathrust show a slow pre‐slip ...
These data are from Laboratory Earthquake Experiments from the Cornell 0.76 m apparatus in support o...
Geodetic observations and large-scale laboratory experiments show that seismic instability is preced...
Geodetic observations and large-scale laboratory experiments show that seismic instability is preced...
Frictional heterogeneity within fault zones is one of the factors proposed to explain the spectrum o...
Recent Global Positioning System observations of major earthquakes such as the 2014 Chile megathrust...
The process of earthquake nucleation is studied assuming that faults are rupture surfaces on which s...
We have employed numerical approaches to study earthquake nucleation on geometrically complex faults...
Frictional heterogeneity within fault zones is one of the factors proposed to explain the spectrum o...
The physical mechanisms governing slow earthquakes remain unknown, as does the relationship between ...
Currently, it is unknown how seismic and aseismic slip influences the recurrence and magnitude of ea...
Fault zones contain structural complexity on all scales. This complexity influences fault mechanics ...
Seismicity clusters within fault zones can be connected to the structure, geometric complexity and s...
Ohnaka and Kuwahara investigated the nucleation process of unstable rupture in their elaborate labor...
Earthquake simulation and hazard prediction are strongly hampered by insufficient physical knowledge...
Recent GPS observations of major earthquakes such as the 2014 Chile megathrust show a slow pre‐slip ...
These data are from Laboratory Earthquake Experiments from the Cornell 0.76 m apparatus in support o...
Geodetic observations and large-scale laboratory experiments show that seismic instability is preced...
Geodetic observations and large-scale laboratory experiments show that seismic instability is preced...
Frictional heterogeneity within fault zones is one of the factors proposed to explain the spectrum o...
Recent Global Positioning System observations of major earthquakes such as the 2014 Chile megathrust...
The process of earthquake nucleation is studied assuming that faults are rupture surfaces on which s...
We have employed numerical approaches to study earthquake nucleation on geometrically complex faults...
Frictional heterogeneity within fault zones is one of the factors proposed to explain the spectrum o...
The physical mechanisms governing slow earthquakes remain unknown, as does the relationship between ...
Currently, it is unknown how seismic and aseismic slip influences the recurrence and magnitude of ea...
Fault zones contain structural complexity on all scales. This complexity influences fault mechanics ...
Seismicity clusters within fault zones can be connected to the structure, geometric complexity and s...
Ohnaka and Kuwahara investigated the nucleation process of unstable rupture in their elaborate labor...
Earthquake simulation and hazard prediction are strongly hampered by insufficient physical knowledge...
Recent GPS observations of major earthquakes such as the 2014 Chile megathrust show a slow pre‐slip ...
These data are from Laboratory Earthquake Experiments from the Cornell 0.76 m apparatus in support o...