On the speed of fast and slow rupture fronts along frictional interfaces
J{\o}rgen Kjoshagen Tr{\o}mborg, Henrik Andersen Sveinsson, Kjetil, Th{\o}gersen, Julien Scheibert, Anders Malthe-S{\o}renssen

TL;DR
This study uses simulations to explore the diverse rupture front speeds at frictional interfaces, revealing a proportional relationship between slip and front speed, and introducing a new predictor for interface strength based on slip history.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that the proportionality between slip speed and front speed applies across all observed front speeds and introduces the Gini coefficient as an accessible predictor of local static friction.
Findings
Proportionality between slip and front speed holds for all front types.
Fast slip and fast fronts originate from different inertial mechanisms.
The Gini coefficient predicts local static friction from slip history.
Abstract
The transition from stick to slip at a dry frictional interface occurs through the breaking of the junctions between the two contacting surfaces. Typically, interactions between the junctions through the bulk lead to rupture fronts propagating from weak and/or highly stressed regions, whose junctions break first. Experiments find rupture fronts ranging from quasi-static fronts with speeds proportional to external loading rates, via fronts much slower than the Rayleigh wave speed, and fronts that propagate near the Rayleigh wave speed, to fronts that travel faster than the shear wave speed. The mechanisms behind and selection between these fronts are still imperfectly understood. Here we perform simulations in an elastic 2D spring--block model where the frictional interaction between each interfacial block and the substrate arises from a set of junctions modeled explicitly. We find that…
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