Earthquakes: Ive Polanco 14-1006
Earthquakes: Ive Polanco 14-1006
Earthquakes: Ive Polanco 14-1006
Introduction
An earthquake occurs when a sudden release of energy causes the ground to
shake and vibrate, associated with passage of waves of energy released at its
source. Earthquakes can be extremely devastating and costly events, sometimes
killing tens or even hundreds of thousands of people and levelling entire cities in a
matter of a few seconds or minutes
What makes Earthquakes even more dangerous that are extremely random and
oscillatory in nature. We cant run away from them. It that would be impossible, as
the earths broken crust is constantly moving. The clashes between the pieces
creates them. What we can do is to be prepare for them. We do this by studying
how an earthquake is created and they happen. As well we watch for warning
signs that occurs naturally. From this, many lives can be save and the damage to
property it can be reduce.
Faults
A fault is a fracture or zone of fractures between two blocks of rock. Faults allow
the blocks to move relative to each other. All faults are related to the movement of
Earth's tectonic plates. The biggest faults mark the boundary between two plates.
An earthquake is caused by a sudden slip on a fault. When a rupture begins, it
starts at the focus and then propagates up, down, and laterally along the fault
plane during the earthquake. The sudden rupture of the rocks produces shock
waves, called seismic waves, which can shake the ground. In other words, an
earthquake releases the pent-up energy of the strained rocks as a series of
vibrational pulses or waves of energy.
Faults
Faults can be classified according to the way the
rocks on either side of the fault move in relation to
each other.
Normal faults move on steeply inclined surface.
Rocks above the fault surface, slip down and over the
rocks beneath the fault. Normal faults move when
earths crust pull apart, during crustal extension.
Reverse faults move rocks on the upper side of the
fault up and over those below.
Thrust faults are similar to reverse faults, but the
fault surface is more gently inclined. Reverse and
thrust faults move when earths crust is pushed
together, during crustal compression.
Strike-slip fault more move horizontally as rocks on
one side of the fault slip laterally burst those on the
other side.
Predicting Earthquakes
Earthquake prediction is generally
defined as specifying where, when,
how big, and how probable a
predicted event is. But, it is difficult
to predict exactly when and where an
earthquake will occur and how large
it may be.
Some observations have been able
to predict in a very general manner
which areas are most likely to have
earthquake in specific interval of
time.
Preparations
The majority of deaths and injuries from
earthquakes are caused by the damage or
collapse of buildings and other structures.
These losses can be reduced through
documenting and understanding how
structures respond to earthquakes.
Earthquakes destroy buildings by generating
waves that propagate through soil and create
movement at a buildings foundation. This
energy transfers into the buildings structure;
if the structure cannot properly absorb it
through a combination of strength, flexibility,
and ductility (the ability to bend without
breaking)the building will fail. But there
are plenty of ways to prevent that happening.
Base isolation
Separate the substructure of a building
from its superstructure
System involves floating a building above
its foundation on lead-rubber bearings,
which contain a solid lead core wrapped
in alternating layers of rubber and steel.
Steel plates attach the bearings to the
building and its foundation and then,
when an earthquake hits, allow the
foundation to move without moving the
structure above it.
Shock absorbers
Shock absorbers slow down and
reduce the magnitude of vibratory
motions by turning the kinetic
energy of your bouncing suspension
into heat energy that can be
dissipated through hydraulic fluid.