2slides - EQ Lecture 4 - Seismic Waves
2slides - EQ Lecture 4 - Seismic Waves
2slides - EQ Lecture 4 - Seismic Waves
Resistant Structures
,𝑻 𝒇 𝟏 ⁄𝑻
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Seismic Waves
(Earthquake’s energy is transmitted through the earth as seismic waves)
Seismic Waves
(2) Surface waves: transmit energy along (parallel to)
earth’s surface.
Love Waves (L-waves)
Arrives after S waves. Typical velocity Depends
on earth structure, but less than velocity of S-
waves and faster than Rayleigh waves.
Composed of transverse S only. (Rock moves
from side to side like snake).
Behavior: Causes shearing motion (horizontal)
similar to SH-waves.
Rayleigh Waves
Arrives after Love waves. Typical velocity: ~
0.9 that of the S-wave. They usually arrive last
on a seismogram.
Composed of both P and longitudinal S waves.
(Rolling Pattern like oceanic waves). Causes
vertical together with back-and-forth
horizontal motion. Motion is similar to that of
being in a boat in the ocean when a swell
moves past. 4
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P-wave
S-wave
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P wave involves volume expansion and contraction
P can propagate in liquid as well as solid
It is the faster than all other elastic waves
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Primary Waves
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Oscillate perpendicular to the direction of propagation
Polarized in a direction determined by the source
No S in liquid; bombs does not generate S waves
Earthquakes (faulting) makes large S waves
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Secondary Waves
S waves
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Primary waves
They are body wave type.
P-waves, compressional or longitudinal.
Typical crustal velocity: 6 km/s ( ~13,500 mph)
Travel through solids, liquids, or gases
Material movement is in the same direction Even for P waves (which
as wave movement (parallel to the wave can travel all the way
direction). through) we see some
changes in the path at
Behavior: Cause dilation and contraction
certain points within
(compression) of the earth material through
which they pass.
Earth. This is due to the
discontinuities present at
Arrival: They arrive first on a seismogram different boundaries in
(fastest waves). earth structure .
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Shadow Zone - no earthquake waves 15
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- Surface wave
Composed of SH waves
Oscillate in the transverse direction (side-by-side motion).
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- Surface wave
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Two most common types of surface waves
Love Waves
Rayleigh Waves 21
Side-to-side motion
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More on Surface Waves
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Surface Waves
Huge close to the Earth’s surface
Decrease in amplitude at greater depth
amplitude
Earth Surface
depth
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More on Rayleigh Waves
When Rayleigh arrives the ground does
a BACKWARD ELLIPTICAL FLIP.
Rayleigh Wave Motion
It could become the
strong and severe ground
motion – for example,
during the 1985 Mexico
City earthquake.
Useful for determination
of Earth’s structures.
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Direction of
Ground movement
Direction of
Propagation
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Movement of Earth
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Location and Intensity
of Earthquake
Seismographic stations around the
World work together to
Record earthquake location.
Determine earthquake strength.
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Vertical
Component
Horiz. (N-S)
Component
Horiz. (E-W)
Component
Vertical Component
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Aleutians
Hawaii
Mariana
Guram
Solomon Is.
Tonga
NWAO
Kermadec
New Zealand
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For a Californian earthquake
Waves comes in almost due West.
Vertical and E-W P wave motions.
S may be on all three components.
Love in ??? Direction.
Rayleigh in ??? Directions.
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P wave from S. America
Ground
Surface UP
E
W E
Direction of wave
propagation
Direction of
P
Ground movement
E-W P wave
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E
W E
Direction of wave
propagation
Direction of
SV
Ground movement
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For a south American
earthquake
Seismic waves comes in almost due
South.
P waves on U-D and N-S.
S waves on all three directions.
Love waves in ??? Direction.
Rayleigh waves in ??? Directions.
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N
S N
Direction of wave
propagation
Direction of
P
Ground movement
U-D and N-S P wave
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SV waves from S. California
UP
S
S N
Direction of wave
propagation
Direction of
SV
Ground movement
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More on S Waves
The transverse component of S (SH) has
only horizontal motion (i.e., L wave).
The SV component will have longitudinal
(i.e. R-wave) and vertical motions.
The S wave polarization is determined
mainly by the source of the wave motion.
Cause destruction during strong shaking.
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Continental Seismicity
The long belt from Mediterranean to the
Himalaya.
Spain/Italy/Greece/Turkey/Iran/Afghanistan
Pamirs/Himalaya/Tibetan Plateau.
Kunlun/Tianshan/Mongolia/China.
Basin and Range Province
Nevada/Utah/Idaho
East African Rift.
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A Brief History of Seismology
Ancient legends.
Japanese Namazu.
Chinese seismo-scope (Chang Heng,
132 AD)
Invention of seismometers in Japan by
Gray/Milne/Ewing, 1890’s
Modern Seismology (1920- current)
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Seismometer
= Seismogram + Seismograph:
Mass – inertia.
Restoring force.
Resonance.
Damping.
Force-balanced system.
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Seismogram
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Seismograph
Amplifier.
Filter – pick and choose signal freq. Range.
Clock – from pendulum to GPS.
Digitization.
Recording system:
Old: optical – messy.
New: digital; need computer .
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Modern
Seismograph
(Horizontal)
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Modern
Seismograph
(Vertical)
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Measurement of Ground Motions
Strong ground motions vs. weak motions.
Acceleration (up to 2000 cm/sec2= 2 g).
Velocity (up to 300 cm/sec).
Displacement (up to 10 meters – 1000cm).
For distant earthquakes:
Displacement of few microns (0.0001 cm).
On the moon: 0.000001 cm!
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Seismogram interpretation
Seismograms can provide
information on
epicenter location.
Magnitude of earthquake.
source properties.
Most seismograms will record
P, S & surface waves.
First arrival is P wave.
After a pause of several
seconds/10s seconds the
higher amplitude S wave - surface waves follow and may
arrives. continue for tens of seconds
Defines S-P interval. - surface waves are slower but
persist to greater distances than
P & S waves
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Wave terminology
Wave amplitude
height of a wave above its
zero position.
Wave period
time taken to complete
one cycle of motion.
Frequency
number of cycles per
second (Hertz)
felt shaking during quake
has frequencies from 20
down to 1 Hertz. Human ear can detect frequencies
down to 15 Hz
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Ground Motion Recording
The actual ground motion at a
given location is derived from
instrumentally recorded motions.
The most commonly used
instruments for engineering
purposes are strong motion
accelerographs/ accelerometers.
These instruments record the
acceleration time history of
ground motion at a site, called
an accelerogram.
By proper analysis of a recorded accelerogram to account for instrument
distortion and base line correction, the resulting corrected acceleration record
can be used by engineers to obtain ground velocity and ground displacement
by appropriate integration. 57
Accelerometer
Types of Accelerometers:
Electronic : transducers
produce voltage output.
Servo controlled: use
suspended mass with
displacement transducer.
Piezoelectric: Mass attached Principle: An acceleration a will cause the
mass to be displaced by ma/k or alternatively,
to a piezoelectric material, if we observe a displacement of x, we know that
which develops electric the mass has undergone an acceleration of
kx/m.
charge on surface.
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Seismic Networks
A collection of seismic stations
with data collected and used
together.
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Early Network
British Network: 1890’s-1920, Milne
seismographs.
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World-Wide Standard Seismograph
Network, WWSSN
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U.S. Geological Survey (USGS),
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Other Instruments Used in
Earthquake Studies
GPS (like everybody else) for measuring
ground deformation
Strain meter.
Water well level sensors.
Electrical and electromagnetic sensors –
somewhat hocus-pocus. ﻧﻮﻋﺎ ً ﻣﺎ ﺧﺎﺩﻉ ﻭﻏﻴﺮ ﺩﻗﻴﻖ
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Earthquake Location
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Why Locate Earthquakes?
For rescue effort – without it the
emergency vehicles do not know where
to go!
What to Locate?
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(Sharp points or lines)
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What do we need?
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𝑥 𝑥 𝑧𝑜
𝑇 zo
𝑉
EQ: (xo, zo)
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Travel Time Curves
Ways to derive travel times:
Using artificial shots – hammer, gun-shells, air-gun,
explosives in drill holes, quarry blasts, nuclear tests.
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Locating an Earthquake’s Epicenter
Seismic wave behavior
P waves arrive first, then S waves, then L and R
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Location with Many Stations
(TS – TP) can be used or one can use only TP
(the easiest to read and the most accurate).
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Wadati Plot
Vp/Vs = 1.73
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Seismic Travel-time Curve: If the speeds of the seismic waves are
not known, use Travel-Time curve for that region to get the distance
1. Measure time
between P and S
wave on
seismogram
2. Use travel-time
curves for the
specified region to
get distance to
epicenter.
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Location with a few stations
(at least three)
Use time of arrival of P waves, Tp, and time
of arrival of S waves, TS
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𝑽𝑷 𝑽𝑺
𝑫𝒊𝒔𝒕𝒂𝒏𝒄𝒆, 𝑫 𝑻 𝑻𝑷
𝑽𝑷 𝑽𝑺 𝑺
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3-Circle Method: 3-Circle Steps:
1) Read S-P time from 3
North seismograms.
2) Compute distance for
D1 each event/recording
D2
station pair (D1, D2, D3)
using S-P time formula.
3) Draw each circle of
radius Di on map.
4) Overlapping point is
the event location.
D3
Assumption: Source is
relatively shallow;
epicenter is relatively
close to hypocenter.
𝑽𝑷 𝑽𝑺
𝑫𝒊𝒔𝒕𝒂𝒏𝒄𝒆, 𝑫 𝑻 𝑻𝑷
𝑽𝑷 𝑽𝑺 𝑺
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Earthquake Processes
Frictional Stress.
Statics and Dynamics.
Water and Earthquakes.
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Friction and Faulting
Friction prevents faults from moving while
strain accumulates:
N
Friction stress = friction coeff. x Normal stress
( N PW )
By increasing the water pressure the effect
of the normal stress can be neutralized.
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Importance of water on Faulting
From laboratory experiments we know
that the friction will be very high at depth
because of the high normal stress.
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Effect of injected
water on EQ’s
occurrence.
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Reservoir and Earthquakes
1936 Lake Mead (Hoover Dam) earthquakes
followed by M5.
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Reservoir
and
Earthquakes
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India
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Dynamic Friction
Once the fault gets moving then the
friction drops a bit, i.e., once the fault
gets moving it is easier to move more –
an instability.
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Earthquake Sequence
Ambient earthquakes.
Foreshock - Main shock - Aftershock
Storms and Swarms
Volcanic
Non-volcanic
Foreshocks and Aftershocks.
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Fore-, Main- and Aftershocks: Chaos
(Disorder) in the Fault Zone?
Normally when a small earthquake occurs the
fault zone overall remains “stable”.
But a small event in an unstable
environment – when the fault zone is all
stressed up, then
a “foreshock” may lead to a cascade (flow) of
events in the fault zone, resulting in the Main
Shock and followed by the Aftershocks.
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Predicting Earthquakes
Strange Animal Behavior
Stress in the rocks causes tiny hairline fractures to form, the
cracking of the rocks evidently emits high pitched sounds
and minute vibrations imperceptible to humans but
noticeable by many animals.
Foreshocks
Unusual increase in the frequency of small earthquakes
before the main shock
Changes in water level
Porosity increases or decreases with changes in strain
Seismic Gaps
Based of the chronological distribution of major earthquakes 10
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