Do upper-plate material properties or fault frictional properties
dominate tsunami earthquake characteristics?
Abstract
Tsunami earthquakes are a type of shallow subduction zone events that
rupture slowly (<1.5 km/s) with exceptionally long duration
and depleted high frequency radiation, resulting in a large discrepancy
of Mw and Ms magnitudes and abnormally large tsunami along coastal
areas. Heterogeneous fault frictional properties at shallow depth have
been thought to dominate tsunami earthquake generation. Some recent
studies propose heterogeneous upper-plate material properties determine
rupture behavior of megathrust earthquakes, including characteristics of
tsunami earthquakes. In this study, we use a recently developed dynamic
earthquake simulator to explore tsunami earthquake generation and
systematically examine roles of upper-plate material properties and
fault frictional properties in tsunami earthquake characteristics in a
physics-based framework. For heterogeneous fault friction, we consider
isolated asperities with strongly velocity-weakening properties embedded
in a conditionally stable zone with weakly velocity-weakening
properties. For heterogeneous upper-plate properties, we consider a
generic depth profile of seismic velocity and rigidity constrained from
seismic surveys. We design a set of models to explore their effects on
tsunami earthquake generation and characteristics. We find that the
conditionally stable zone can significantly slow down rupture speeds of
earthquakes that nucleate on asperities to be < 1.5 km/s over
a large depth range (1-20 km), while heterogeneous upper-plate
properties can only reduce rupture speeds to be ~1.5-2.0
km/s over a narrow depth range (1-3km). Nevertheless, heterogeneous
upper-plate properties promote cascading rupture over multiple isolated
asperities on the shallow subduction plane, contributing to large
tsunami earthquake generation. We also find that heterogeneous friction
dominates normalized duration and high-frequency depletion in tsunami
earthquakes. In addition, the effective normal stress on the subduction
plane, which affects fault frictional strength, significantly influences
the characteristics of tsunami earthquakes, including long normalized
duration and low stress drop.