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Published December 2009 | public
Journal Article

Influence of interaction between small asperities on various types of slow earthquakes in a 3-D simulation for a subduction plate boundary

Abstract

Recently, the occurrence of slow earthquakes such as low-frequency earthquakes and very low-frequency earthquakes have been recognized at depths of about 30 km in southwest Japan and Cascadia. These slow earthquakes occur sometimes in isolation and sometimes break into chain-reaction, producing tremor that migrates at a speed of about 5–15 km/day and suggesting a strong interaction among nearby small asperities. In this study, we formulate a 3-D subduction plate boundary model with two types of small asperities chained along the trench at the depth of 30 km. Our simulation succeeds in representing various types of slow earthquakes including low-frequency earthquakes and rapid slip velocity in the same asperity, and indicates that interaction between asperities may cause the very low-frequency earthquakes. Our simulation also shows chain reaction along trench with propagation speed that can be made consistent with observations by adjusting model parameters, which suggests that the interactions also explain the observed migration of slow earthquakes.

Additional Information

© 2009 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. Received 15 November 2008; revised 6 March 2009; accepted 7 March 2009. Available online 27 March 2009. Discussion with Dr. Bunichiro Shibazaki was useful to sharpen the target of our simulation. Dr. Kazushige Obara kindly taught us the details of observed low-frequency earthquake behaviors. We thank two reviewers for constructive comments and Dr. M. Santosh and Dr. S. Maruyama for expeditious editorial handling. This study used the Earth Simulator for our simulations, and the supercomputing resources at Cyberscience Center of Tohoku University for running experimental simulation to improve program codes. This work is supported by DONET program of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. GMT software (Wessel and Smith, 1998) was used to draw some figures.

Additional details

Created:
August 21, 2023
Modified:
October 19, 2023