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Earthquake fault zones exhibit hierarchical damage and granular
structures with evolving geometrical and material properties.
Understanding how repeated brittle deformation form the structures
and how the structures affect subsequent earthquakes is a rich
problem involving coupling of various processes that operate over
broad space and time scales. The diverse state-of-the-art papers
collected here show how insight can come from many fields including
statistical physics, structural geology and rock mechanics at large
scales; elasticity, friction and nonlinear continuum mechanics at
intermediate scales; and fracture mechanics, granular mechanics and
surface physics at small scales. This volume will be useful to
students and professional researchers from Earth Sciences, Material
Sciences, Engineering, Physics and other disciplines, who are
interested in the properties of natural fault zones and the
processes that occur between and during earthquakes.
Considerable progress has been made recently in quantifying
geometrical and physical properties of fault surfaces and adjacent
fractured and granulated damage zones in active faulting
environments. There has also been significant progress in
developing rheologies and computational frameworks that can model
the dynamics of fault zone processes. This volume provides
state-of-the-art theoretical and observational results on the
mechanics, structure and evolution of fault zones. Subjects
discussed include damage rheologies, development of instabilities,
fracture and friction, dynamic rupture experiments, and analyses of
earthquake and fault zone data.
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