Attention network forecasts time-to-failure in laboratory shear experiments
December 12, 2019 Β· Declared Dead Β· π Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
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Authors
Hope Jasperson, David C. Bolton, Paul Johnson, Robert Guyer, Chris Marone, Maarten V. de Hoop
arXiv ID
1912.06087
Category
physics.geo-ph
Cross-listed
cs.LG
Citations
26
Venue
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Last Checked
3 months ago
Abstract
Rocks under stress deform by creep mechanisms that include formation and slip on small-scale internal cracks. Intragranular cracks and slip along grain contacts release energy as elastic waves termed acoustic emissions (AE). AEs are thought to contain predictive information that can be used for fault failure forecasting. Here we present a method using unsupervised classification and an attention network to forecast labquakes using AE waveform features. Our data were generated in a laboratory setting using a biaxial shearing device with granular fault gouge intended to mimic the conditions of tectonic faults. Here we analyzed the temporal evolution of AEs generated throughout several hundred laboratory earthquake cycles. We used a Conscience Self-Organizing Map (CSOM) to perform topologically ordered vector quantization based on waveform properties. The resulting map was used to interactively cluster AEs. We examined the clusters over time to identify those with predictive ability. Finally, we used a variety of LSTM and attention-based networks to test the predictive power of the AE clusters. By tracking cumulative waveform features over the seismic cycle, the network is able to forecast the time-to-failure (TTF) of lab earthquakes. Our results show that analyzing the data to isolate predictive signals and using a more sophisticated network architecture are key to robustly forecasting labquakes. In the future, this method could be applied on tectonic faults monitor earthquakes and augment current early warning systems.
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