日本地球惑星科学連合2014年大会

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セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-SS 地震学

[S-SS30_28PM2] 海溝型巨大地震の新しい描像

2014年4月28日(月) 16:15 〜 18:00 メインホール (1F)

コンビーナ:*金川 久一(千葉大学大学院理学研究科)、古村 孝志(東京大学大学院情報学環総合防災情報研究センター)、小平 秀一(海洋研究開発機構 地球内部ダイナミクス領域)、宍倉 正展(産業技術総合研究所 活断層・地震研究センター)、座長:井出 哲(東京大学大学院理学系研究科地球惑星科学専攻)

17:15 〜 17:30

[SSS30-22] 地震発生に先行する断層強度低下の地震波モニタリング可能性の検討

*亀 伸樹1永田 広平2中谷 正生1日下部 哲也1 (1.東京大学地震研究所、2.文部科学省)

キーワード:断層強度, 地震サイクル, 速度・状態依存摩擦則, 地震先行現象, 線形すべりモデル, 地震波モニタリング

Rate- and state-dependent friction law (RSF), proposed on the basis of laboratory experiments, has been extensively applied to modeling of earthquake stick-slip cycles. A simple spring-slider model obeying RSF predicts a significant decrease of the frictional strength Phi (the state of contact) that is localized within a few years preceding the earthquake occurrence. On the other hand, recent laboratory experiments successfully monitored the history of the strength by simultaneously measuring P-wave transmissivity |T| across the frictional interface using a 1MHz transducer. This suggests a possibility of earthquake forecast by monitoring the strength of a natural fault by acoustic methods.The present paper explores the feasibility of such monitoring in the field on the basis of the physics of RSF combined with the linear slip model (LSM) employed in the classical acoustic methodology for monitoring an imperfectly welded interface. The characteristic frequency f_c, around which |T| (or reflectivity |R|) has a good sensitivity to the interface strength, is shown to be proportional to the strength and inversely proportional to the representative scale of real contacts.For natural faults f_c is estimated to be 1 to 100Hz, which is practicable in the field. The changes of |T| and |R| depend on the ratio of the strength drop to the absolute strength level, the latter of which is not constrained by RSF simulations. Expected changes in wave amplitude in the preslip period would be several percent for strong faults and several tens percent for weak faults, which may be detectable by acoustic methods such as seismic reflection surveys.