Cinna Lomnitz Aronsfrau (4 May 1925 – 7 July 2016) was a Chilean-Mexican geophysicist known for his contributions in the fields of rock mechanics and seismology.
Lomnitz was born to a Jewish family in Cologne, Germany.
[1] He graduated as engineer from the University of Chile in 1948.
He then studied with Karl von Terzaghi in Harvard University and obtained a Master's degree in soil mechanics.
[2] Lomnitz received his doctorate from Caltech in 1955 with a dissertation on creep measurements in igneous rocks.
[3] Its principal thesis, a logarithmic creep behavior observed in rocks, was reformulated as the "Lomnitz Law" by Harold Jeffreys in 1958.
is the constant stress load on the material,
Though the Lomnitz law was inferred empirically from rheological measurements on rocks, its validity was firmly established by Pandey and Holm[5] by deriving it from the physical principles in the framework of fractional calculus.
They had used a time-varying Maxwell model in their analysis and found that the underlying physical mechanism in rocks that led to the Lomnitz law was a linearly time-varying viscosity,
Such a property with increasing viscosity with time corresponds to rheopecty, or anti-thixotropy, a special class of Non-Newtonian fluid.
Pandey and Holm extracted the physical interpretation of the parameters of the Lomnitz law as follows:
is the relaxation time during which the transition from the elastic- to creep-type deformation occurs.
[5] The mechanism underlying the Lomnitz law is that the time-varying part increases linearly with time and dominates over the constant part,
Interestingly, the relaxation modulus of the time-varying Maxwell model was identified as the Nutting law from rheology.
Lomnitz was the founding director of the Instituto de Geofísica at the Universidad de Chile.
He then taught at the University of California-Berkeley between 1964 and 1968, and moved to the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México's Instituto de Geofísica in 1968, where he worked for the rest of his life.
He founded Mexico's first seismic network, RESMAC, in 1971, and became editor of the journal Geofísica Internacional in 1990.
Lomnitz authored a number of books, notably Global Tectonics and Earthquake Risk (Elsevier, 1974).
[6] Cinna Lomnitz died in Mexico City in 2016, aged 91.
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