Member Since 2008
Ylona van Dinther
Assistant Professor, Utrecht University
Professional Experience
Utrecht University
Assistant Professor
Education
Doctorate
2014
Honors & Awards
Jason Morgan Early Career Award
Received December 2018
Ylona van Dinther will receive the 2018 Jason Morgan Early Career Award at AGU’s Fall Meeting 2018, to be held 10–14 December in Washington, D. C. The award is for “significant early career contributions to tectonophysics through a combination of res...
Ylona van Dinther will receive the 2018 Jason Morgan Early Career Award at AGU’s Fall Meeting 2018, to be held 10–14 December in Washington, D. C. The award is for “significant early career contributions to tectonophysics through a combination of research, education, and outreach activities.”  
Citation

Ylona van Dinther is one of the few people in her generation who has pushed the research community into “big challenges” directions. She has distinguished herself by conducting groundbreaking research in quantitative tectonophysics.

Ylona developed and applied a new numerical modeling approach, the seismo–thermo–mechanical (STM) technique, which enables innovative cross-disciplinary research, bridging the gap between geodynamics and seismology. Ylona’s work is at the forefront of mechanical modeling linking geodynamic space–time scales of millions of years of slow and broadly distributed regional deformation with seismic space–time scales of rapid and localized rupture processes. Ylona applied the STM approach to subduction zone environments and presented her results in leading scientific journals.

Ylona stands out for her enthusiasm, breadth of knowledge, quantitative skills, and scientific vision, combined with exceptional efficiency in conducting research, participating in collaborative projects, and serving the community. She is also a great teacher and an excellent science communicator, who is able to explain complex scientific problems (and their solutions) in an effective and engaging manner.

It is worth mentioning that Ylona has been able to continue her productive scientific career while being a mother of two babies.

Ylona strongly deserves the Jason Morgan Award. We all look forward to seeing more scientific discoveries from her and will try to keep up with her progress.

—Jean-Philippe Avouac, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena; Francesca Funiciello, Università Degli Studi Roma Tre, Rome, Italy; Taras Gerya, ETH Zürich, Zurich, Switzerland; and Kelin Wang, Geological Survey of Canada, Sidney, B.C.

Response
I am deeply honored to receive the 2018 Jason Morgan Early Career Award and join the exquisite company of its previous recipients. My sincerest thanks go to Jean-Philippe Avouac, his fellow nomination writers, and the Tectonophysics section for this recognition. This represents the grand finale of an extraordinary year with the birth of my second son, an assistant professor position, graduating students, and various honorable plenary talks, while moving back home. Thanks to all colleagues, family, and friends who made that possible. In particular, I would like to thank those who significantly influenced my career, which is founded on solid undergraduate studies I received at Utrecht University. At Roma Tre University, my mentor and friend Francesca Funiciello helped me to become the scientist I am today and lighted my wish to bridge from geodynamics into seismology. During my Ph.D., postdoctoral, and senior scientist years at ETH Zürich, I worked among great seismologists, which facilitated me to actually build that bridge. In particular, I remain forever grateful to my mentors at ETH Zürich, Taras Gerya and Andreas Fichtner, for their complementary examples and letting me define my own research, while supporting me, my group, and my family unconditionally. In addition, I have been fortunate to work with bright students who completed this bridge and applied it to demonstrate its power. Last but not least, this would not have been possible without the eternal support of my husband, Bram, and my parents and parents-in-law, who with love and dedication helped with the care for our sons, Bastiaan and Arthur. From this basis onward, I hope to be able to facilitate the advancement of science and society, among others, by making new generations of students enthusiastic for an engaging journey discovering Earth, academics, and life. —Ylona van Dinther, ETH Zürich, Zurich, Switzerland; and Utrecht University, Utrecht, Netherlands
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Publications
Characteristics of Earthquake Cycles: A Cross‐Dimensional Comparison of 0D to 3D Numerical Models

High‐resolution computer simulations of earthquake sequences in three or even two dimensions pose great demands on time and energy, making lo...

August 19, 2022
AGU Abstracts
Earthquake nucleation location and slip behavior altered by normal stress heterogeneities
ORIGINS AND IMPLICATIONS OF HETEROGENEITIES IN DRY AND FLUID-PRESSURIZED FAULT ZONES ACROSS SCALES II ORAL
tectonophysics | 15 december 2023
Meng Li, Andre R. Niemeijer, Ylona van Dinther
A diverse spectrum of slip behaviors occurs prior to and between earthquakes, including foreshocks and slow slip events. Laboratory, field and numeric...
View Abstract
Community Code Verification Exercises for Simulations of Earthquake Sequences and Aseismic Slip (SEAS): Effects from Dipping Faults and Full Elastodynamics to Fluids and Fault Friction Evolution
SLOW-TO-FAST EARTHQUAKES FROM SHALLOW TO DEEP: OBSERVATIONS, EXPERIMENTS, AND NUMERICAL MODELING IV POSTER
tectonophysics | 13 december 2023
Valere Lambert, Brittany A. Erickson, Junle Jiang,...
Numerical simulations of sequences of earthquakes and aseismic slip (SEAS) have rapidly progressed over recent decades to address fundamental problems...
View Abstract
Why induced earthquakes occur on conventionally stable faults: frictional healing explains
BRIDGING FIELD AND LABORATORY STUDIES TO UNVEIL THE MECHANISMS OF UNSTABLE FAULT SLIP I ORAL
tectonophysics | 12 december 2023
Meng Li, Andre R. Niemeijer, Ylona van Dinther
Conventional laboratory experiments suggest that faults in the shallow subsurface should be resistant to earthquake nucleation, because their friction...
View Abstract

Volunteer Experience
2018 - 2022
Associate Editor
JGR Solid Earth Section
2020 - 2021
Early Career Scientist
Tectonophysics Executive Committee
2019 - 2020
Member
Tectonophysics Early Career & OSPA Committee
Check out all of Ylona van Dinther’s AGU Research!
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