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Rheological implications for localization of strain in rock. Ethan Coon (APAM). Marc Spiegelman (LDEO/APAM). Peter Kelemen (LDEO). Today’s talk:. Big Picture: viscoelasticity and complex rheologies in solid earth dynamics Small Picture: shear zones in the upper mantle/lower crust
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Rheological implications for localization of strain in rock Ethan Coon (APAM) Marc Spiegelman (LDEO/APAM) Peter Kelemen (LDEO)
Today’s talk: • Big Picture: viscoelasticity and complex rheologies in solid earth dynamics • Small Picture: shear zones in the upper mantle/lower crust • Physics/Equations • Numerical Results • Where to next?
? • visco-elastic rheology (temperature, grain size, and stress- dependent viscosity) • brittle/microcracks/damage • fluid flow/porosity Mid Ocean Ridge (the simple version)
Shear Zones (Regenauer-Lieb and Yuen, Earth Science Reviews 2003) As a mechanism for deep earthquakes? (Whitehead and Gans, Geophys. J. Roy. Astr. Soc 1974) (Ogawa, JGR 1987) (Kameyama and Kaneda, Pure and App. Geophysics 2002)
Shear Zones U U
The Equations: ( enthalpy balance ) ( conservation of momentum ) ( constitutive relation ) ( grain size evolution )
Creep Processes: • dislocation creep- movement of vacancies and defects through lattice • diffusion creep- diffusion of atoms through lattice at areas of high stress • grain boundary sliding- combination of diffusion and dislocation creep at grain boundaries
Numerics • Finite differences in space • Irregularly spaced mesh (to resolve localization of strain • Crank-Nicholson semi-implicit time stepping with adaptive time step • Nonlinear solves… go PETSc!
Grain size feedback localization grain boundary sliding dislocation creep diffusion creep
Conclusions and Remarks on Future Work • Nonlinear rheologies can cause localization of strain • Given a localized region of small grain sizes, viscoelasticity can allow • for quasi-periodic events which approach earthquake velocities deeper • than brittle processes predict. These types of regions are observed in • the upper crust, and may be present in the lower crust as well, causing • “deep” earthquakes. • Future models should allow evolution of grain size due to grinding and • strain-equilibrium growth. Also, melting rock to form porosity occurs • at high temperatures, which would feed back on viscosities. • Dealing with complex rheologies may fundamentally change the • dynamics of the system, and should be studied in depth for certain • regions of the earth.
Thanks to… • Marc Spiegelman, Peter Kelemen, and the Lamont/APAM Geodynamics Group • PETSc people • NSF IGERT and DOE/Krell CSGF for paying the present and future bills.