“…As shown in Figure 1b, the one‐dimensional model under imposed‐displacement boundary conditions can describe the response of a low velocity fault zone that is much more compliant than the surrounding wall rock. In natural systems, the damage, plasticity and compliance of the low velocity fault zone are expected to evolve both spatially along the fault according to the gradient in fault maturity (Cappa et al.,
2014), but also temporally as a dynamic result of the rupture (Ben‐Zion & Dresen,
2022; Mia et al.,
2022). The proposed model can be extended to account for finite contrast of compliance between the damage zone and the wall rock, for instance by including a viscous term
on the right hand side of Equation 1 to account for radiation damping effects, that is, mechanical energy lost as elastic waves in the surrounding bulk (Barras et al.,
2019).…”