Abstract

AbstractNumerical simulation of rupture dynamics provides critical insights for understanding earthquake physics, while the complex geometry and heterogeneous material properties of natural faults make numerical method development challenging. The discontinuous Galerkin (DG) method is suitable for handling these complexities. In the DG method, the fault boundary conditions can be conveniently imposed through the upwind flux by solving a Riemann problem based on a velocity‐strain elastodynamic equation. However, the universal adoption of upwind flux can cause spatial oscillations in cases where elements on adjacent sides of the fault surface are not nearly symmetric. Here we propose a nodal DG method with an upwind/central mixed‐flux scheme to solve the spatial oscillation problem and thus reduce the dependence on mesh quality. Our method can achieve high scalability in parallel computing under different orders of accuracy. We verify the new method by comparing simulation results with those from other methods on a series of published benchmark problems with complex fault geometries, heterogeneous materials, off‐fault plasticity, roughness, thermal pressurization, and various versions of fault friction laws. Finally, we demonstrate that our method can be applied to simulate the dynamic rupture process of the 2008 Mw 7.9 Wenchuan earthquake along realistic fault geometry, including branches, step‐overs and a previously neglected sub‐parallel fault segment, offering a high potential to systematically explore the influences of fault zone properties on earthquake rupture dynamics.

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