{"ID":19738920,"title":"Physics of Megathrust Earthquakes"}
This topical volume on the physics of megathrust earthquakes investigates many aspects of the earthquake phenomenon, from the geodynamic setting of subduction zones, to interseismic and postseismic deformation, slow-slip events, dynamic rupture, and tsunami generation.The dynamics of the seismic cycle at megathrusts is rich in various types of earthquakes, many of which , only recently discovered. Our early understanding of the earthquake phenomenon was a type of stick-slip motion, where the fault is loaded by tectonic forces for an extended period, followed by rapid failure. Extensive seismic and geodetic monitoring of subduction zones has revealed a much more varied seismic behavior, where episodic fault slip can occur at any slip velocity between the background loading rate, of the order of a few atoms per second, and the fast seismic range, about a meter per second. Events that fill the gap between slow creep and fast ruptures include a host of slow earthquakes. Subduction zones therefore provide a natural laboratory to better understand the physics of earthquakes and faulting. , ,Previously published in Pure and Applied Geophysics, Volume 176, Issue 9, 2019The chapters ?Interseismic Coupling and Slow Slip Events on the Cascadia Megathrust?, ?Effect of Slip-Weakening Distance on Seismic?Aseismic Slip Patterns?, ?Physics-Based Scenario of Earthquake Cycles on the Ventura Thrust System, California: The Effect of Variable Friction and Fault Geometry?, and ?A Secondary Zone of Uplift Due to Megathrust Earthquakes? are available as open access articles under a CC BY 4.0 license at link.springer.com , ,...Mehr