English

Aftershocks in Coherent-Noise Models

Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability 2009-10-30 v2 adap-org Disordered Systems and Neural Networks Statistical Mechanics Adaptation and Self-Organizing Systems

Abstract

The decay pattern of aftershocks in the so-called 'coherent-noise' models [M. E. J. Newman and K. Sneppen, Phys. Rev. E54, 6226 (1996)] is studied in detail. Analytical and numerical results show that the probability to find a large event at time tt after an initial major event decreases as tτt^{-\tau} for small tt, with the exponent τ\tau ranging from 0 to values well above 1. This is in contrast to Sneppen und Newman, who stated that the exponent is about 1, independent of the microscopic details of the simulation. Numerical simulations of an extended model [C. Wilke, T. Martinetz, Phys. Rev. E56, 7128 (1997)] show that the power-law is only a generic feature of the original dynamics and does not necessarily appear in a more general context. Finally, the implications of the results to the modeling of earthquakes are discussed.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.physics/9710023,
  title  = {Aftershocks in Coherent-Noise Models},
  author = {C. Wilke and S. Altmeyer and T. Martinetz},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:physics/9710023},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

23 pages, 8 figures, Latex with elsart.cls, revised version accepted for publication in Physica D