TY - JOUR
T1 - Under what circumstances is the final size of a laboratory earthquake predictable at the onset of the P-wave?
AU - Morad, D.
AU - Gvirtzman, S.
AU - Gil, Y.
AU - Fineberg, J.
AU - Brodsky, E. E.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025/9/1
Y1 - 2025/9/1
N2 - How do earthquakes begin and what information about this process is contained in a far field seismogram? We present a quantitative analysis of laboratory earthquakes incorporating both laboratory-scale seismic measurements coupled with high-speed imaging of the controlled dynamic ruptures that generated them. We generated variations in the rupture properties by imposing sequences of controlled artificial barriers along the laboratory fault. We first demonstrate that direct measurements of imaged slip events correspond to established seismic analysis of acoustic signals; the seismograms correctly record the rupture moments and maximum moment rates. We then investigate the ruptures’ early growth by comparing their measured seismogram velocities to their final size. Due to higher initial elastic energies imposed prior to nucleation, larger events accelerate more rapidly at the rupture onset. We find that the corresponding seismogram velocities are therefore predictive of the final rupture size. This observation holds in the presence of barriers with one notable exception. Rupture events that overtake a previously arrested rupture are less magnitude predictable, likely because of the stress heterogeneity (and resulting stored elastic energy) induced by the earlier event. For all other events, the higher elastic energy at nucleation results in faster and larger ruptures, and hence the initial seismogram velocity and ultimate size correlate well. This degree of magnitude predictability is consistent with some, but not all recent natural observations. For early warning purposes, we suggest that confining the observational database to the conditions most conducive to magnitude predictability may provide stronger correlations.
AB - How do earthquakes begin and what information about this process is contained in a far field seismogram? We present a quantitative analysis of laboratory earthquakes incorporating both laboratory-scale seismic measurements coupled with high-speed imaging of the controlled dynamic ruptures that generated them. We generated variations in the rupture properties by imposing sequences of controlled artificial barriers along the laboratory fault. We first demonstrate that direct measurements of imaged slip events correspond to established seismic analysis of acoustic signals; the seismograms correctly record the rupture moments and maximum moment rates. We then investigate the ruptures’ early growth by comparing their measured seismogram velocities to their final size. Due to higher initial elastic energies imposed prior to nucleation, larger events accelerate more rapidly at the rupture onset. We find that the corresponding seismogram velocities are therefore predictive of the final rupture size. This observation holds in the presence of barriers with one notable exception. Rupture events that overtake a previously arrested rupture are less magnitude predictable, likely because of the stress heterogeneity (and resulting stored elastic energy) induced by the earlier event. For all other events, the higher elastic energy at nucleation results in faster and larger ruptures, and hence the initial seismogram velocity and ultimate size correlate well. This degree of magnitude predictability is consistent with some, but not all recent natural observations. For early warning purposes, we suggest that confining the observational database to the conditions most conducive to magnitude predictability may provide stronger correlations.
KW - Earthquake early warning, Laboratory earthquakes, Acoustic sensing
KW - Earthquake seismology
KW - Rupture dynamics
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105006635261&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.epsl.2025.119436
DO - 10.1016/j.epsl.2025.119436
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AN - SCOPUS:105006635261
SN - 0012-821X
VL - 665
JO - Earth and Planetary Science Letters
JF - Earth and Planetary Science Letters
M1 - 119436
ER -