The dynamics of unsteady frictional slip pulses

Author:

Pomyalov Anna1ORCID,Barras Fabian23,Roch Thibault4ORCID,Brener Efim A.56ORCID,Bouchbinder Eran1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Chemical and Biological Physics Department, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 7610001, Israel

2. The Njord Centre, Department of Physics, University of Oslo, Oslo 0316, Norway

3. The Njord Centre, Department of Geosciences, University of Oslo, Oslo 0316, Norway

4. Civil Engineering Institute, Materials Science and Engineering Institute, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne CH-1015, Switzerland

5. Peter Grünberg Institut, Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich D-52425, Germany

6. Institute for Energy and Climate Research, Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich D-52425, Germany

Abstract

Self-healing slip pulses are major spatiotemporal failure modes of frictional systems, featuring a characteristic sizeL(t)and a propagation velocitycp(t)(tis time). Here, we develop a theory of slip pulses in realistic rate- and state-dependent frictional systems. We show that slip pulses are intrinsically unsteady objects—in agreement with previous findings—yet their dynamical evolution is closely related to their unstable steady-state counterparts. In particular, we show that each point along the time-independentL(0)(τd)cp(0)(τd)line, obtained from a family of steady-state pulse solutions parameterized by the driving shear stressτd, is unstable. Nevertheless, and remarkably, thecp(0)[L(0)]line is a dynamic attractor such that the unsteady dynamics of slip pulses (when they exist)—whether growing (L˙(t)>0) or decaying (L˙(t)<0)—reside on the steady-state line. The unsteady dynamics along the line are controlled by a single slow unstable mode. The slow dynamics of growing pulses, manifested byL˙(t)/cp(t)1, explain the existence of sustained pulses, i.e., pulses that propagate many times their characteristic size without appreciably changing their properties. Our theoretical picture of unsteady frictional slip pulses is quantitatively supported by large-scale, dynamic boundary-integral method simulations.

Funder

Israel Science Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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