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Department of Earth Sciences
University of Southern
California
Los Angeles, California,
90089-0740
sammis{at}earth.usc.edu
(C.G.S.)
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
and Division of
Engineering and Applied Sciences
Harvard University
Cambridge,
Massachusetts,
02138
rice{at}esag.harvard.edu.
(J.R.R.)
The source of repeating earthquakes on creeping faults is modeled as a weak
asperity at a border between much larger locked and creeping patches on the
fault plane. The x1/2 decrease in stress
concentration with distance x from the boundary is shown to lead
directly to the observed scaling
T

M0
1/6
between the average repeat time and average scalar moment for a repeating
sequence. The stress drop in such small events at the border depends on the
size of the large locked patch. For a circular patch of radius R and
representative fault parameters, 
=
7.6(m/R)3/5 MPa, which yields stress drops
between 0.08 and 0.5 MPa (0.85 bars) for R between 2 km and
100 m. These low stress drops are consistent with estimates of stress drop for
small earthquakes based on their seismic spectra. However, they are orders of
magnitude smaller than stress drops calculated under the assumption that
repeating sources are isolated stuck asperities on an otherwise creeping fault
plane, whose seismic slips keep pace with the surrounding creep rate. Linear
streaks of microearthquakes observed on creeping fault planes are trivially
explained by the present model as alignments on the boundaries between locked
and creeping patches.
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