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Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America; August 1976; v. 66; no. 4; p. 1173-1187
© 1976 Seismological Society of America
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Rupture velocity and radiation efficiency

MOUJAHED I. HUSSEINI* and M. J. RANDALL{dagger}

CIRES UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO NOAA, BOULDER COLORADO 80309

Abstract

So long as there is some finite specific fracture energy involved in earthquake rupture, the rupture velocity cannot exceed the Rayleigh-wave velocity CR in the direction of mode II extension, or the S-wave velocity ß in the direction of mode III extension. The radiation efficiency {eta}R, which is the fraction of available energy that goes into seismic waves, depends upon the rupture velocity. It is zero if the crack grows quasi-statically, increases with rupture velocity, and tends to unity as the velocity approaches the limiting value appropriate to the mode of extension.

A model involving a semi-infinite crack in antiplane shear (mode III) which accelerates rapidly to a velocity v, and runs at this velocity until it is arrested by a barrier of higher fracture energy, yields a formula for estimating the specific fracture energy {gamma}0,


Formula

where L is the length of extended rupture, T0 is the traction and µ is the rigidity of the elastic medium. This agrees, within a factor of 2 for 0 < V/ß < 0.9, with the formula deduced by Husseini et al. (1975) for a model involving the "seismic gap" mode of arrest,


Formula

This formula therefore provides a reasonable estimate of the specific fracture energy involved in an earthquake that is insensitive to the mode of arrest of the rupture.

Footnotes

* Present address: A.O.S. G.S.I., Canterbury House, Sydenham Road, Croydon, Surrey, England.

{dagger} Present address: Geophysics Division, D.S.I.R., P.O. Box 8005, Wellington, New Zealand.




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