Skip to main content
CODE 98685
ACADEMIC YEAR 2020/2021
CREDITS
SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINARY SECTOR GEO/10
LANGUAGE Italian
TEACHING LOCATION
  • GENOVA
SEMESTER 1° Semester
TEACHING MATERIALS AULAWEB

OVERVIEW

The course is aimed at presenting the fundamental principles of earthquake phenomenology. In particular, the course will examine the relation between seismicity and faults, as they are both the results of the same dynamic process. Basics of rock mechanics, rock fracturing, seismic deformation, and earthquake interaction will be discussed. The scope is to provide the student with a basic knowledge of the physics behind the seismic process. 

AIMS AND CONTENT

LEARNING OUTCOMES

The course is aimed at presenting the fundamental principles of earthquake phenomenology. In particular, the course will examine the relation between seismicity and faults, as they are both the results of the same dynamic process. Basics of rheology, rock fracturing, fault growing, and seismic deformation will be introduced. The course will also focus on seismotectonics. Seismic activity in different geodynamic settings will be discussed. The scope of the course is to provide the student with a basic knowledge of the phenomenology behind seismic process. The topics discussed during the lessons will allow understanding why, where, and when earthquakes occur.

AIMS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES

The participation in the planned activities will allow the student to understand the mechanisms governing earthquake formation. Specifically, students will acquire knowledge in fracture mechanics and earthquake physics. They will learn to interpret earthquakes as the result of complex physical processes of fault interaction in space and time.

PREREQUISITES

Students are expected to know the following structural geology topics: 1) deformation mechanisms; 2) classification of faults and shear zones; 3) classification of fault rocks.

TEACHING METHODS

The course consists of lectures delivered through multimedia presentations and computer exercises.

Lectures of the first semester will be carried out in classroom, if possible. However, online streaming and video recording (synchronous or asynchronous) will be guaranteed. Likewise, practical activities will take place in laboratory, with multiple shifts if necessary. All classroom and laboratory activities will be carried out in compliance with the capacity limits of the classrooms / laboratories and the distance required by current legislation following the emergency COVID19.

Please refer to AulaWeb for further informations about the measures for the prevention and management of the epidemiological emergency caused by Covid-19

SYLLABUS/CONTENT

1) Introduction: where and why earthquakes occur; earthquakes in the world and relationship with terrestrial geodynamics; the contribution of geodesy to the understanding of seismic activity.

2) Fracture mechanics: fracturing criteria (Griffith theory, Mohr-Coulomb criterion, and Byerlee law); fracture dynamics (modes and patterns of fracture propagation); rock friction (asperity and barrier models; dependence of friction force on composition, pressure, temperature, presence of fluids, and slip velocity) and friction laws; dynamics of stick-slip (stick-slip vs stable sliding; stress drop; equation of motion); fault interaction and fault populations (scaling laws and self-similarity).

3) Earthquake mechanics: magnitude; seismic moment and energy; focal mechanisms; scaling laws (Gutenberg & Richter's law for single sources and groups of faults; characteristic earthquake model).

4) Phenomenology of earthquakes: seismic sequences and swarms (definition of aftershock, foreshock, and discussion of case studies); role of dilatancy and diffusion of fluids in the seismic process; earthquake interaction (static vs dynamic triggering; Coulomb failure criterion with practice exercise); seismic cycle and earthquake recurrence models.

During the lessons, basics of earthquake prediction will be provided: meaning (prediction vs. forecasting); short, medium, and long term forecasting, precursor phenomena.

RECOMMENDED READING/BIBLIOGRAPHY

All slides used during the lectures and other teaching material will be available on AulaWeb at the end of each cycle of lessons.

Scholz, C. H. The Mechanics of Earthquakes and Faulting, Third Edition. Cambridge University Press (2019).

TEACHERS AND EXAM BOARD

Exam Board

SIMONE BARANI (President)

GABRIELE FERRETTI

DANIELE SPALLAROSSA (President Substitute)

DAVIDE SCAFIDI (Substitute)

LESSONS

LESSONS START

For lessons start and timetable go to the following link: https://easyacademy.unige.it/portalestudenti/

Class schedule

EARTHQUAKES DYNAMICS

EXAMS

EXAM DESCRIPTION

The exam consists of an oral test (3 questions on topics covered during the course). The exam is passed if the student has obtained a grade greater than or equal to 18.

Please refer to AulaWeb for further informations about the measures for the prevention and management of the epidemiological emergency caused by Covid-19.

ASSESSMENT METHODS

The exam will focus on the topics covered during the lectures and will aim to assess the achievement of the appropriate level of knowledge. The ability to present the topics clearly and with correct terminology will also be evaluated. The degree of detail required for each topic will be provided during lectures.

Exam schedule

Data appello Orario Luogo Degree type Note
27/07/2021 10:00 GENOVA Orale
07/09/2021 10:00 GENOVA Orale

FURTHER INFORMATION

Regular attendance at lectures and laboratory exercises is strongly recommended.