Krittanon (Pond) Sirorattanakul
seismopond.bsky.social
Krittanon (Pond) Sirorattanakul
@seismopond.bsky.social
Earthquake scientist from Thailand || BS @LehighU 2018 || PhD @Caltech 2024 || Also love badminton and biking || he/him || ksirorat.people.caltech.edu
Pinned
A chapter from my @caltech.edu PhD thesis has been published in @nature.com. We (me, S. Larochelle, V. Rubino, N. Lapusta, A. Rosakis) show that interfaces under non-zero shear stress are always sliding, even if they appear to be stationary to the naked eye.

www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Sliding and healing of frictional interfaces that appear stationary - Nature
Digital image correlation measurements show that nominally stationary interfaces subjected to constant shear and normal loads are sliding at extremely small rates, confirming the predictions of rate-a...
www.nature.com
Reposted by Krittanon (Pond) Sirorattanakul
⚒️ 🧪

New satellite imaging of the Myanmar earthquake area confirms that the rupture was unusually long: ~500 km.

We discuss the data, the rupture, and the implications, in our latest post.

earthquakeinsights.substack.com/p/surface-ru...
Surface ruptures of the Myanmar M7.7 earthquake mapped from space
An extremely long rupture is confirmed
earthquakeinsights.substack.com
April 1, 2025 at 8:59 PM
Reposted by Krittanon (Pond) Sirorattanakul
🌟OPEN ACCESS: MYANMAR PAPERS🌟As a service to researchers working on the 2025 M7.7 Myanmar earthquake, we have curated a list of papers related to the region and its faults, free until until April 16. ⚒️

#BSSA: pubs.geoscienceworld.org/bssa/pages/a...

#SRL: pubs.geoscienceworld.org/srl/pages/ap...
April 1, 2025 at 9:52 PM
@caltech.edu has a press release about our article recently published in @nature.com. This work is a result of collaborative efforts across disciplines, from seismology (@caltechseismo.bsky.social) to engineering and aeronautics (GALCIT).

Read more here: caltech.edu/about/news/e...
March 14, 2025 at 2:32 AM
Nature social media account has also shared our paper!
March 14, 2025 at 2:04 AM
A chapter from my @caltech.edu PhD thesis has been published in @nature.com. We (me, S. Larochelle, V. Rubino, N. Lapusta, A. Rosakis) show that interfaces under non-zero shear stress are always sliding, even if they appear to be stationary to the naked eye.

www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Sliding and healing of frictional interfaces that appear stationary - Nature
Digital image correlation measurements show that nominally stationary interfaces subjected to constant shear and normal loads are sliding at extremely small rates, confirming the predictions of rate-a...
www.nature.com
March 13, 2025 at 2:22 AM