Abstract
Abrupt frictional fault failure is normally accompanied by acoustic
emission (AE)—impulsive elastic wave broadcast—with amplitude
proportional to particle velocity. The cumulative sum of the fault
particle velocities is a slip displacement.
In laboratory shear experiments described here, measurements of a
sequence of laboratory earthquakes includes local measurement of fault
displacement and AE. Using these measurements we illuminate the
connections between “cumulative sum of AE” and “slip displacement“.
Additionally, the composition of the AE broadcasts reveals inhomogeneity
in the fault mechanical structure from which they arise. This
inhomogeneity, leading to a time invariant white AE component and an
articulated AE, indicates that the articulated cumulative sum of the AE
reveals a fault “state of the mechanical structure” diagnostic, that
follows a distinctive pattern to frictional failure. This pattern
explains why the continuous AE map to fault displacement as well as
fault friction, shear stress, etc., as shown in many recent studies.