Laboratory landquakes: Insights from experiments into the high-frequency
seismic signal generated by geophysical granular flows
Abstract
Geophysical granular flows exert basal forces that generate seismic
signals, which can be used to better monitor and model these severe
natural hazards. A number of empirical relations and existing models
link these signals’ high-frequency components to a variety of flow
properties, many of which are inaccessible by other analyses. However,
the range of validity of the empirical relations remains unclear and the
models lack validation, owing to the difficulty of adequately
controlling and instrumenting field-scale flows. Here, we present
laboratory experiments investigating the normal forces exerted on a
basal plate by dense and partially dense flows of spherical glass
particles. We measured the power spectra of these forces and inferred
predictions for these power spectra from the models proposed by Kean et
al. (2015), Lai et al. (2018), Farin et al. (2019), and Bachelet (2018),
using Hertz theory to extend Farin et al. (2019)’s models to higher
frequencies. The comparison of these predictions to our observations
shows those of Farin et al. (2019)’s ‘thin-flow’; model to be the most
accurate, so we examine explanations for this accuracy and discuss its
implications for geophysical flows’ seismic signals. We also consider
the normalisation, by the mean force exerted by each flow, of the
force’s mean squared fluctuations, showing that this ratio varies by
four orders of magnitude over our experiments, but is determined by a
bulk inertial number of the flow.