Chester Judith S, Chester Frederick M, Kronenberg Andreas K
Center for Tectonophysics, Department of Geology & Geophysics, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843-3115, USA.
Nature. 2005 Sep 1;437(7055):133-6. doi: 10.1038/nature03942.
Fracture energy is a form of latent heat required to create an earthquake rupture surface and is related to parameters governing rupture propagation and processes of slip weakening. Fracture energy has been estimated from seismological and experimental rock deformation data, yet its magnitude, mechanisms of rupture surface formation and processes leading to slip weakening are not well defined. Here we quantify structural observations of the Punchbowl fault, a large-displacement exhumed fault in the San Andreas fault system, and show that the energy required to create the fracture surface area in the fault is about 300 times greater than seismological estimates would predict for a single large earthquake. If fracture energy is attributed entirely to the production of fracture surfaces, then all of the fracture surface area in the Punchbowl fault could have been produced by earthquake displacements totalling <1 km. But this would only account for a small fraction of the total energy budget, and therefore additional processes probably contributed to slip weakening during earthquake rupture.
破裂能是形成地震破裂面所需的一种潜热形式,它与控制破裂扩展和滑动弱化过程的参数有关。破裂能已根据地震学和实验岩石变形数据进行了估算,但其大小、破裂面形成机制以及导致滑动弱化的过程仍未明确界定。在此,我们对盆形断层(圣安德烈亚斯断层系统中一条大位移剥露断层)的结构观测进行了量化,并表明在该断层中形成破裂面区域所需的能量比单一大地震的地震学估计值大300倍左右。如果破裂能完全归因于破裂面的产生,那么盆形断层中的所有破裂面区域可能由总位移小于1千米的地震产生。但这仅占总能量预算的一小部分,因此在地震破裂期间,可能还有其他过程导致了滑动弱化。