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Induced seismicity provides insight into why earthquake ruptures stop
Author(s) -
Martin Gális,
JeanPaul Ampuero,
P. Martín,
Frédéric Cappa
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aap7528
Subject(s) - induced seismicity , seismology , magnitude (astronomy) , earthquake magnitude , seismic hazard , scaling , scaling law , geology , range (aeronautics) , physics , mechanics , materials science , mathematics , geometry , astronomy , composite material
Injection-induced earthquakes pose a serious seismic hazard but also offer an opportunity to gain insight into earthquake physics. Currently used models relating the maximum magnitude of injection-induced earthquakes to injection parameters do not incorporate rupture physics. We develop theoretical estimates, validated by simulations, of the size of ruptures induced by localized pore-pressure perturbations and propagating on prestressed faults. Our model accounts for ruptures growing beyond the perturbed area and distinguishes self-arrested from runaway ruptures. We develop a theoretical scaling relation between the largest magnitude of self-arrested earthquakes and the injected volume and find it consistent with observed maximum magnitudes of injection-induced earthquakes over a broad range of injected volumes, suggesting that, although runaway ruptures are possible, most injection-induced events so far have been self-arrested ruptures

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