We monitor dynamic rupture propagation during laboratory stick-slip experiments performed on saw-cut Westerly granite under upper crustal conditions (10-90 MPa). Spectral analysis of high-frequency acoustic waveforms provided evidence that energy radiation is enhanced with stress conditions and rupture velocity. Using acoustic recordings band-pass filtered to 400-800 kHz (7-14 mm wavelength) and high-pass filtered above 800 kHz, we back projected high-frequency energy generated during rupture propagation. Our results show that the high-frequency radiation originates behind the rupture front during propagation and propagates at a speed close to that obtained by our rupture velocity inversion. From scaling arguments, we suggest that the origin of high-frequency radiation lies in the fast dynamic stress-drop in the breakdown zone together with off-fault coseismic damage propagating behind the rupture tip. The application of the back-projection method at the laboratory scale provides new ways to locally investigate physical mechanisms that control high-frequency radiation.
Ian Smith, Katrin Beyer, Bryan German Pantoja Rosero, Mathias Christian Haindl Carvallo