-
2022 Seismic Cycles Workshops
13 Oct 2022 | Contributor(s):: Sylvain Barbot, Multiple
Presentations from the 2022 Seismic Cycles Workshop.
-
2020 Crustal Deformation Modeling Workshop Report
27 Jul 2022 | Contributor(s):: Brad Aagaard, Sylvain Barbot, Brittany Erickson, Matthew Knepley, Mark Simons, Charles Williams
Workshop report
-
2022 Software Developers Workshop
13 Jul 2022 | | Contributor(s):: Brad Aagaard, Rene Gassmoeller, Lorraine Hwang
Workshop Report
-
2022 Modeling shallow slow slip events along the Hikurangi margin: Insights into their segmentation and the effect of pore-pressure cycling
02 Jul 2022 | | Contributor(s):: Andrea Perez-Silva
Friday July 1, 2022 Andrea Perez-Silva, Victoria University of Wellington Over the last two decades, geodetic observations have revealed slow slip events (SSEs) in most subduction zones worldwide. Of these, SSEs that occur along the shallow (<~15 km depth) portion of the Hikurangi...
-
Jun 20 2022
2022 Crustal Deformation Modeling Workshop
We will be holding our biannual crustal deformation modeling workshop June 20-24, 2022, at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden, Colorado. The weeklong workshop will include 2 days of...
https://geodynamics.org/events/details/260
-
2022 Cycles of slow slip events on nonplanar subduction faults and their implications on megathrust earthquakes
11 Jun 2022 | | Contributor(s):: Duo Li
Slow slip and slow earthquakes (SSEs), driven by transient aseismic deformation along the subduction interface, are proposed to affect the initiation of megathrust earthquakes. Prominent examples, as inferred from geodetic and seismic observations, include the 2011 M9.1Tohoku-Oki,, the 2014...
-
2022 Fault-size dependent fracture energy, seismogenesis, and cascading rupture on multi-scale fault networks
29 May 2022 | | Contributor(s):: Dmitry Garagash
Fracture energy fundamentally affects all aspects of earthquake rupture, including fault seismogenesis. Seismological inferences of fracture energy [1-3] are seen to increase with both slip and the size of fault source. To explain these observations, refs [3-5] invoke co-seismic shear...
-
2022 Theoretical insights on the rupture arrest of large earthquakes
24 May 2022 | | Contributor(s):: Jean Paul Ampuero
What determines the size of an earthquake? How can we quantify the control of geometric and material heterogeneities on rupture segmentation? I will present recent progress in our theoretical understanding of earthquake rupture arrest, especially for the largest earthquakes. Recent advances in...
-
2022 Mainshock and aftershock sequence simulations in a nonplanar fault network
19 May 2022 | | Contributor(s):: So Ozawa, Ryosuke Ando
Aftershocks seem to be located along the trace of the mainshock fault; however, due to the location error, we do not know their exact location relative to the mainshock fault. Here, we hypothesize that most aftershocks occur on small subsidiary faults instead of the mainshock fault, and they...
-
May 15 2022
2022 ASPECT Hackathon
Dates: May 15-24, 2022Location: Cody, WyomingTo further the development of the mantle convection code ASPECT and its user community, current users and developers of ASPECT will be working...
https://geodynamics.org/events/details/249
-
2022 Poroelastic Implementation in PyLith: Gateway to Multiphysics
13 May 2022 | | Contributor(s):: Robert L Walker
Thursday May 12, 2022 @ 2P PDT Poroelastic Implementation in PyLith: Gateway to Multiphysics Robert Walker, SUNY Buffalo PyLith, a community, open-source code (https://geodynamics.org/resources/pylith) for modeling quasi-static and dynamic crustal deformation with an emphasis on earthquake...
-
May 12 2022
Poroelastic Implementation in PyLith: Gateway to Multiphysics
Robert Walker, SUNY BuffaloPyLith, a community, open-source code (https://geodynamics.org/resources/pylith) for modeling quasi-static and dynamic crustal deformation with an emphasis on...
https://geodynamics.org/events/details/236
-
Apr 14 2022
Interaction Between Earthquakes and Interseismic Deformation
Kali Allison, UC DavisEarthquake cycle models can be used to understand the processes that govern fault and shear zone structure and to link these processes to earthquake cycle...
https://geodynamics.org/events/details/235
-
Mar 10 2022
Dynamo Simulations of Planetary Cores
Ryan Orvedahl, UC DavisThe majority of solar system planets possess global, or large-scale, magnetic fields. These magnetic fields are all thought to be generated by the dynamo mechanism, whereby...
https://geodynamics.org/events/details/234
-
2022 Energy transfer among flow and magnetic fields with different equatorial symmetry during the dipole reversal in a geodynamo simulation
17 Feb 2022 | | Contributor(s):: Takumi Kera, Hiroaki Matsui, Masaki Matsushima, Yuto Katoh
The geomagnetic field has reversed its polarity, and some numerical dynamos have suggested that anti-symmetric flow with respect to the equator plays a role in reversals. Olson et al., (2004) suggested that the equatorial antisymmetric flow is temporarily strengthened, and transports a locally...
-
Jan 13 2022
Introduction to reference Earth models and datasets using AVNI
Pritwiraj ‘Raj’ Moulik, Princeton University• Open-source Python package with APIs to handle data and compute intensive queries• Introduce storage formats or classes for...
https://geodynamics.org/events/details/233