On intermittency in sheared granular systems
Miroslav Kramar, Chao Cheng, Rituparna Basak, Lou Kondic

TL;DR
This study investigates the behavior of sheared granular systems under intermittent stick-slip dynamics, revealing that micro and mesoscale measures can predict slip events through increased fluctuations, unlike global averages.
Contribution
It identifies two distinct groups of measures, showing that micro and mesoscale indicators can signal imminent slip events, unlike traditional global measures.
Findings
Micro and mesoscale measures increase rapidly before slip events.
Global measures remain relatively insensitive to impending slips.
Fluctuations at small scales are key predictors of slip initiation.
Abstract
We consider a system of granular particles, modeled by two dimensional frictional elastic disks, that is exposed to externally applied time-dependent shear stress in a planar Couette geometry. We concentrate on the external forcing that produces intermittent dynamics of stick-slip type. In this regime, the top wall remains almost at rest until the applied stress becomes sufficiently large, and then it slips. We focus on the evolution of the system as it approaches a slip event. Our main finding is that there are two distinct groups of measures describing system behavior before a slip event. The first group consists of global measures defined as system-wide averages at a fixed time. Typical examples of measures in this group are averages of the normal or tangent forces acting between the particles, system size and number of contacts between the particles. These measures do not seem to be…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGranular flow and fluidized beds · Sports Dynamics and Biomechanics · Landslides and related hazards
