Critical behavior in earthquake energy dissipation
Author
Abstract
We explore bursty multiscale energy dissipation from earthquakes flanked by latitudes 29 degrees S and 35.5 degrees S, and longitudes 69.501 degrees W and 73.944 degrees W (in the Chilean central zone). Our work compares the predictions of a theory of nonequilibrium phase transitions with nonstandard statistical signatures of earthquake complex scaling behaviors. For temporal scales less than 84 hours, time development of earth-quake radiated energy activity follows an algebraic arrangement consistent with estimates from the theory of nonequilibrium phase transitions. There are no characteristic scales for probability distributions of sizes and lifetimes of the activity bursts in the scaling region. The power-law exponents describing the probability distributions suggest that the main energy dissipation takes place due to largest bursts of activity, such as major earthquakes, as opposed to smaller activations which contribute less significantly though they have greater relative occurrence. The results obtained provide statistical evidence that earthquake energy dissipation mechanisms are essentially "scale-free" , displaying statistical and dynamical self-similarity. Our results provide some evidence that earthquake radiated energy and directed percolation belong to a similar universality class.
Patrocinador
Fondecyt Grants
1150718
1130273
1161711
CEDENNA
US AFOSR Grant
FA9550-16-1-0384
National Science Foundation
AGS-1104364
Indexation
Artículo de publicación ISI
Quote Item
Eur. Phys. J. B (2017) 90: 167
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