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A Living Database of Dynamic Earthquake Rupture Publications and their Assumptions ("Ingredients")

 

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Here is the Excel file: DynRupPublications_Group_March172024.xlsx

 

Description

For five decades scientists have been using computational simulations of dynamic (spontaneous) earthquake rupture to better understand earthquake sources, especially for large earthquakes. Long ago there were some peer-reviewed publications on the topic, but in recent times, there is a plethora of journal articles. This means that we may easily forget or never have read the good work done in the past, and we are also likely to be unaware of many of the numerous publications being produced in the present. To this end, our group leader, Ruth, led our SCEC-USGS dynamic rupture group in putting together a database of information about the peer-reviewed dynamic rupture papers published in high-quality journals over the years. The goal was to not only list the publications themselves, but also provide detailed information about the "ingredients" or assumptions used to conduct the simulations in each paper, along with the authors' proposed applications for each study. This document is envisioned as a living document, whereby newer peer-reviewed publications will be included after they are published, and more of the older papers we have not yet included will also be added. This document is also the start of a planned review article.

Please note that there are acronyms in the top row of the spreadsheet. These acronyms are all defined in the spreadsheet itself, in a section of rows below the publications entries.

 

Authors

Ruth Harris, U.S. Geological Survey

Wenqiang Zhang and Yajing Liu, McGill University, Canada

Evan Hirakawa, U.S. Geological Survey

Suli Yao and Hongfeng Yang, Chinese University of Hong Kong, China

Zhenguo Zhang, Southern University of Science and Technology, China

František Gallovič, Charles University, Czech Republic

Ben Duan, Texas A&M University

Kadek Palgunadi, ETH Zurich, Switzerland

Feng Hu, University of Science and Technology of China, China

Kenichi Tsuda, Shimizu Corporation, Japan

Kim Olsen, San Diego State University

Yihe Huang, University of Michigan

Roby Douilly, University of California, Riverside

Shuo Ma, San Diego State University

Arben Pitarka, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Junle Jiang, University of Oklahoma

Yongfei Wang, Verisk Analytics

Betsy Madden, San Jose State University

Yoshi Kaneko, Kyoto University, Japan

Eric Dunham, Stanford University

Brad Aagaard, U.S. Geological Survey

Michael Barall, U.S. Geological Survey

Julian Lozos, California State University, Northridge

David Oglesby, University of California, Riverside

Alice Gabriel, University of California, San Diego

Yuko Kase, Geological Survey of Japan, Japan

Elisa Tinti, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy

 

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This page was last updated or reviewed on 19 March 2024.