Self-organized first-order transition from foreshock to mainshock in earthquake sequences induced by heat, fluid pressure, and porosity
Takehito Suzuki, Hiroshi Matsukawa

TL;DR
This paper models earthquake sequences considering interactions among slip, fluid pressure, temperature, and porosity, revealing a spontaneous first-order transition from foreshock to mainshock driven by these factors.
Contribution
It introduces a spring-block model demonstrating a self-organized first-order transition in earthquake sequences induced by physical interactions.
Findings
Discovered a spontaneous first-order transition from foreshock to mainshock.
Identified the energy function $F(u)$ as governing slip behavior.
Provided a phase diagram linking slow and fast earthquakes.
Abstract
Earthquake cycles are studied by taking into account the interactions among slip, fluid pressure, temperature, and porosity on the fault planes, which are known to play a crucial role in earthquake dynamics. The spring-block model with a single block is employed. A first-order transition from foreshock to mainshock occurring spontaneously in earthquake sequences is discovered both analytically and numerically. This transition is induced by these interactions. It is shown that the function of the slip distance , , defined as the sum of the difference between the energies stored in the driving spring before and after the slippage, and the energy dissipated during the slippage, governs the transition. The equation, , represents the energy balance before and after the slippage, and the solution describes the realized slip distance for each slippage event. The…
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