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[SCG45-23] Depth-dependent Slow Earthquakes Controlled by Temperature Dependence of Brittle-ductile Transitional Rheology
Keywords:Rheology, Fault rocks, Physical model
The key mechanism is the interplay between the volumetric fraction of brittle blocks and the viscosity of the surrounding plastically deformed matrix, where the former and the latter decrease with increasing temperature. We simplified the fault area with brittle patches embedded in an otherwise ductile background imposed in the one-degree-of-freedom model. We assume the fraction of the brittle patches over the fault area is described by a power law function of temperature T as Rb(T)=1-T-Tfb/Tfp-Tfbc, which decreases from one at the fully brittle temperature Tfb to zero at the fully ductile temperature Tfd. We can describe the amount of slip as the decreasing function of temperature:
maxΔu(T)∝Δfo[1-{(T-Tfb)/(Tfp-Tfb)}c,
where Δfo is a constant corresponding to the amount of force drop at the fully brittle temperature. If we further incorporate the ductility governed by plastic flow mechanisms with the temperature-dependent viscosity given by the Arrhenius law (ηT=ηoexp(gTm/T)), the maximum amount of slip rate at T is described by
max Δu(T)∝Δfo[1-{(T-Tfb)/(Tfp-Tfb)c}/ηo{(T-Tfb)/(Tfp-Tfb)}cexp(gTm/T).
This function exhibits a peak of the slip rate at an intermediate temperature Tsr satisfying Tfb<Tsr<Tfp. This peak of slip rate reproduces SIL as the result of the interplay between the brittle fraction Rb(T) and the viscosity ηT, which are both the decreasing function of temperature but, importantly, at a different speeds. This model is extended to shallow-slow earthquakes, where the origin of the ductility is shown to be different if SIL is absent. Our results open a new pathway to infer the deformation mechanisms underlying slow earthquakes.
Reference: Ando, Ujiie, Nishiyama and Mori, Geophys. Res. Letter, 2022GL101388, 2023 (in press).