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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019
    Description: Abstract We investigate energy partitioning using seismological methods of sources with estimated sub‐micron levels of slip in the laboratory. Estimates inferred from recorded seismic waves are founded on micro‐scale phenomenological friction experiments in the laboratory and appear to be constrained by the inherent assumptions. In this concerted study, we build on the methods used to absolutely calibrate an array of piezoelectric transducers in a direct shear laboratory apparatus. We found that flat‐broadband sensor behavior, allowed us to study source‐extent parameters using spectral source models that are typically used to interpret small to moderate‐sized earthquakes. We computed the corner frequencies, low‐frequency plateaus and high‐frequency spectral falloff exponent using single station assumptions. Moment magnitude ranged from ‐9〈Mw〈‐7.5 and slip was on the order of nanometers to micrometers ‐ extending our understanding of source parameters studied via seismic waves. A number of findings are highlighted: (i) Variations in spectral falloff with corner frequencies followed the observations made in natural conditions. (ii) Corner frequency shift phenomena was observed (fcP/fcS∼ 1.34) and was attributed to source finiteness rather than wave propagation effects. (iii) Events were stress‐overshoot as determined by the Savage‐Wood efficiency. (iv) The empirical power law scaling relationship between fracture energy and slip, given as , where nG=1.28 appears to breakdown with seismological estimates made at the mining scale (nG=1.86) and laboratory scale (nG=2.35). This break in scaling may be related to the types of off‐fault energy sinks that are inherently captured in the seismological interpretation of fracture energy.
    Print ISSN: 2169-9313
    Electronic ISSN: 2169-9356
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Published by Wiley on behalf of American Geophysical Union (AGU).
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