Fault activation from up close

crossref(2024)

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摘要
Our understanding of earthquake rupture processes is generally limited by the resolution of available observations. In all but exceptional cases, earthquake observations are made at comparatively large distances from the rupture itself, which puts a limit on what spatial scales can be resolved. At the same time, it is clear that small scale processes may play a crucial, if not dominant, role for various seismogenic processes, including rupture nucleation, co-seismic weakening and stress re-distribution. The Fault Activation and Earthquake Rupture ('FEAR') project aims at collecting and interpreting a multitude of earthquake-relevant observations from directly on and around the process zone of an induced earthquake. To this end, we attempt to activate a natural granitic fault zone in the BedrettoLab, at a depth of ~1km, after instrumenting the fault zone with a multi-domain and multi-scale monitoring system. The goal is to observe and study earthquake rupture phenomena in a natural setting, from unusually close distance. In this talk, we outline the project status, the science goals, and the plans for the main experiments, which are scheduled for the years 2024 - 2026. Notable milestones we report on include the identification and detailed characterisation of the target fault zone the beginning of niche and tunnel excavations laboratory experiments that characterise the frictional and mechanical behaviour of both gauge material and host rock of the target fault zone development of numerical models for 2D and 3D dynamic rupture propagation development of tailored monitoring methods for seismicity, strain, temperature, pressure, bio-geo-chemistry and other relevant observables development of remote experiment control methods test stimulations in a nearby rock volume of similar geology, with an already existing monitoring system, where we tested the influence of pre-conditioning injection protocols similar test stimulations in the same volume where we aim at triggering a larger event (target Mw~0) active seismic experiments in an underground salt mine, to calibrate the very- to ultra-high frequency (1k Hz - 500k Hz) acoustic emission sensors Together, these and other efforts constitute the necessary ingredients we need for interpreting the near-source observations that we will collect during the fault activation experiments.
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