1 / 26

Institute of Geological & Nuclear Sciences Limited, P.O. Box 30368, Lower Hutt, New Zealand

Synthetic Seismicity of Multiple Interacting Faults and its use for Modelling Strong Ground Motion. Institute of Geological & Nuclear Sciences Limited, P.O. Box 30368, Lower Hutt, New Zealand Ph: +64-4-5701444. Russell Robinson & Rafael Benites. h. c. n. e. r. T. c. e. d. a. m.

ajaxe
Download Presentation

Institute of Geological & Nuclear Sciences Limited, P.O. Box 30368, Lower Hutt, New Zealand

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Synthetic Seismicity of Multiple Interacting Faults and its use for Modelling Strong Ground Motion Institute of Geological & Nuclear Sciences Limited, P.O. Box 30368, Lower Hutt, New Zealand Ph: +64-4-5701444 Russell Robinson & Rafael Benites

  2. h c n e r T c e d a m r e K h g u o r T i g n a r u k i H t l u a F e n i p l A New Zealandtectonic and bathymetricsetting Image from NIWA National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Ltd

  3. Wellington regiontopography

  4. Major faults of theWellington region

  5. Earthquake Commission (EQC) A small fraction of fire insurance premiums is used for earthquake insurance They asked GNS: • What is the probability of two (or more ) large earthquakes in the Wellington region within a few years of one another? • What sort of shaking should we expect from a large earthquake on the Wellington Fault?

  6. Synthetic Seismicity: • Computer model of a network of interacting faults and a driving mechanism. • Generates long catalogues of seismicity so that questions can be answered by statistical analysis. • Computationally efficient but reasonably realistic. • Fault properties are tuned to reproduce known slip rates/directions and other fault properties.

  7. Features: • Coulomb Failure Criterion. • Static/dynamic friction law, modified to include healing. • Okada’s (1992) dislocation routines for calculating induced stresses. • Stress propagation is at the shear wave velocity.

  8. Features: • Induced changes in pore pressure are included. • Mimics dynamic rupture effects to some degree. • All interaction terms are kept in RAM. • The program has been “parallelized” to run on a Beowulf PC cluster.

  9. Fault Interactions

  10. Stress history of a single cell

  11. Modelfaults

  12. Wellington Fault Fault Length: 75 km Fault Width: 20 km Fault Dip: 90o Cell Size: 1 x 1 km Coefficient of Friction: Asperity regions: Random between 0.65 and 0.95 Non-Asperity: Random between 0.40 and 0.70 Stress Drop: 25% Static/Dynamic Strength: 0.85 Healing Time: 3.0 s Dynamic Enhancement Factor: 1.2 Pore Pressure: Initially ~ hydrostatic; varies with time Stress Propagation Velocity: 3.0 km/s

  13. Typical ‘Characteristic’ Event Moment: 1.41 x 1020 N-m; Mw 7.40 ModelSommerville (1999) Rupture Area 1500 km2 2810 km2 Average Slip 2.35 m 1.96 m Area of Asperities 345 km2 630 km2 Area of Largest Asperity 272 km2 458 km2 Radius of Largest Asperity ~9 km2 13 km Num. of Asperities 2 + 1 very small 2.6 Area Covered by Asperities 23% 22% Average Asperity Slip 1.67 2.01 Contrast Corner Spatial Wavenumber, Along Strike 0.01 km-1 0.01 km-1 Along Dip 0.01 km-1 0.02 km-1 Slip Duration 3.0 s 2.55 s Rupture Duration ~30 s -

  14. Final slip distribution

  15. Rupturing ‘snapshots’for a characteristicWellington Fault event

  16. METHOD • Discrete wave number • Generalised reflection/transmission coefficients (Bouchon 1979, Kennet 1973, Chin and Aki 1991) In the plane k-z ky k kx

  17. in which tn is the time shift corresponding to the time step n, XP and XS are the directivity correction factors for P and S waves, respectively, applied to each subfault m, and defined by: with r = average rupture velocity, L = length of the subfault m, and  the angle between the point source corresponding to the subfault m and the station. The components of the wavefield contribution of each subfault in the k-z plane are rotated to the geographical coordinates.

  18. The complete wavefield in the source layer L is computed from: for P-SV waves; and for SH waves, where: The propagation through the layers is performed by applying the generalized reflection/transmission coefficients.

  19. Ground displacement at x=5 km, y=70 km

  20. Velocity and acceleration

  21. Institute of Geological & Nuclear Sciences Limited, P.O. Box 30368, Lower Hutt, New Zealand Ph: +64-4-5701444 www.gns.cri.nz Russell Robinson & Rafael Benites

More Related