Litcius/Paper detail

The Transient and Intermittent Nature of Slow Slip

Romain Jolivet, William B. Frank

2020AGU Advances93 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

To first order, faults are locked while stress builds up to a devastating earthquake. However, we know that faults also slip slowly. After decades of geophysical observation, slow slip is now recognized as part of a continuum of transient deformation ranging from the dynamic propagation of seismic rupture to aseismic events over a wide range of durations and sizes. A growing body of evidence suggests that large‐scale slow slip events can be decomposed into a multitude of smaller, temporally clustered events. Slow slip is more frequent and more dynamic than is suggested by conceptual models of rate‐strengthening, stable slip.

Topics & Concepts

Slip (aerodynamics)GeologyEpisodic tremor and slipSeismologyMechanicsPhysicsEngineeringAerospace engineeringTectonicsSubductionearthquake and tectonic studiesHigh-pressure geophysics and materialsEarthquake Detection and Analysis