The granular jamming transition is experimentally investigated in a
two-dimensional system of frictional, bi-dispersed disks subject to
quasi-static, uniaxial compression at zero granular temperature. Currently
accepted results show the jamming transition occurs at a critical packing
fraction ϕc. In contrast, we observe the first compression cycle exhibits
{\it fragility} - metastable configuration with simultaneous jammed and
un-jammed clusters - over a small interval in packing fraction (ϕ1<ϕ<ϕ2). The fragile state separates the two conditions that define ϕc
with an exponential rise in pressure starting at ϕ1 and an exponential
fall in disk displacements ending at ϕ2. The results are explained
through a percolation mechanism of stressed contacts where cluster growth
exhibits strong spatial correlation with disk displacements. Measurements with
several disk materials of varying elastic moduli E and friction coefficients
μ, show friction directly controls the start of the fragile state, but
indirectly controls the exponential slope. Additionally, we experimentally
confirm recent predictions relating the dependence of ϕc on μ. Under
repetitive loading (compression), the system exhibits hysteresis in pressure,
and the onset ϕc increases slowly with repetition number. This friction
induced hysteretic creep is interpreted as the granular pack's evolution from a
metastable to an eventual structurally stable configuration. It is shown to
depend upon the quasi-static step size Δϕ which provides the only
perturbative mechanism in the experimental protocol, and the friction
coefficient μ which acts to stabilize the pack.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figure