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The Physics of Rock Failure and Earthquakes

The Physics of Rock Failure and Earthquakes

The Physics of Rock Failure and Earthquakes

Mitiyasu Ohnaka, University of Tokyo
March 2018
Paperback
9781108445719

    Despite significant advances in the understanding of earthquake generation processes and derivation of underlying physical laws, controversy remains regarding the constitutive law for earthquake ruptures and how it should be formulated. Laboratory experiments are necessary to obtain high-resolution measurements that allow the physical nature of shear rupture processes to be deduced, and to resolve the controversy. This important book provides a deeper understanding of earthquake processes from nucleation to their dynamic propagation. Its key focus is a deductive approach based on laboratory-derived physical laws and formulae, such as a unifying constitutive law, a constitutive scaling law, and a physical model of shear rupture nucleation. Topics covered include: the fundamentals of rock failure physics, earthquake generation processes, physical scale dependence, and large-earthquake generation cycles. Designed for researchers and professionals in earthquake seismology, rock failure physics, geology and earthquake engineering, it is also a valuable reference for graduate students.

    • The unique deductive approach enables readers to engage with the physics of earthquakes as a truly quantitative science
    • Demonstrates the heterogeneity of real faults in the Earth's crust, making readers aware of the reality of seismogenic zone properties, leading in turn to rational formulation of the law governing earthquake ruptures
    • The first book to show the constitutive law formulated as a unifying law governing both frictional slip failure and shear fracture, providing a new perspective on the significance of a unifying constitutive law

    Product details

    April 2013
    Hardback
    9781107030060
    279 pages
    252 × 192 × 17 mm
    0.78kg
    154 b/w illus. 3 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Fundamentals of rock failure physics
    • 3. Laboratory-derived constitutive relations for shear failure
    • 4. Constitutive laws for earthquake ruptures
    • 5. Earthquake generation processes
    • 6. Physical scale dependence
    • 7. Large earthquake generation cycles and accompanying seismic activity
    • References
    • Index.
      Author
    • Mitiyasu Ohnaka , University of Tokyo

      Mitiyasu Ohnaka has been a Professor Emeritus at the Earthquake Research Institute (ERI), University of Tokyo, since his retirement in 2001. Previously, he worked at the ERI in the fields of rock physics, experimental seismology and the physics of earthquakes, from 1970 onwards, as well as holding various positions such as Honorary Professor at University College London, and invited lecturer or visiting scholar at many worldwide institutions, including the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Professor Ohnaka also worked widely in Japan, supervising researchers and students, and delivering undergraduate and postgraduate lectures, at institutions from the University of Tokyo to Yamagata University and more. He is the co-author of The Physics of Earthquake Generation, Earthquakes and Faults and The Role of Water in Earthquake Generation (these three in Japanese) and Theory of Earthquake Premonitory and Fracture Processes (1995). Professor Ohnaka was Executive Committee member of the International Association of Seismology and Physics of the Earth's Interior (IASPEI) from 1991 to 1995, and also Chair of the Sub-Commission on Modeling the Earthquake Source from 1991 to 2001 in IASPEI. He is a member of the Seismological Society of Japan and the American Geophysical Union.