Avalanches and extreme value statistics in interfacial crackling dynamics
Author(s) -
Stéphane Santucci,
Ken Tore Tallakstad,
Luiza Angheluta,
Lasse Laurson,
Renaud Toussaint,
Knut Jørgen Måløy
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
philosophical transactions of the royal society a mathematical physical and engineering sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1471-2962
pISSN - 1364-503X
DOI - 10.1098/rsta.2017.0394
Subject(s) - amplitude , power law , range (aeronautics) , front velocity , scaling , physics , relaxation (psychology) , statistical physics , mechanics , front (military) , statistics , mathematics , materials science , geometry , optics , meteorology , composite material , psychology , social psychology
We study the avalanche and extreme statistics of the global velocity of a crack front, propagating slowly along a weak heterogeneous interface of a transparent polymethyl methacrylate block. The different loading conditions used (imposed constant velocity or creep relaxation) lead to a broad range of average crack front velocities. Our high-resolution and large dataset allows one to characterize in detail the observed intermittent crackling dynamics. We specifically measure the sizeS , the durationD , as well as the maximum amplitudeof the global avalanches, defined as bursts in the interfacial crack global velocity time series. Those quantities characterizing the crackling dynamics follow robust power-law distributions, with scaling exponents in agreement with the values predicted and obtained in numerical simulations of the critical depinning of a long-range elastic string, slowly driven in a random medium. Nevertheless, our experimental results also set the limit of such model which cannot reproduce the power-law distribution of the maximum amplitudes of avalanches of a given duration reminiscent of the underlying fat-tail statistics of the local crack front velocities.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Statistical physics of fracture and earthquakes’.
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