4.7 Article

NDSHA: A new paradigm for reliable seismic hazard assessment

Journal

ENGINEERING GEOLOGY
Volume 275, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.enggeo.2019.105403

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A New Paradigm is needed for Reliable Seismic Hazard Assessment RSHA, not only from consideration of (a) the huge human losses experienced in the many recently destructive earthquakes worldwide; but also from (b) theoretical considerations of seismic wave generation and propagation phenomena through often non-homogeneous media within the earths crust, particularly when large and more complex fault ruptures occur. The Neo-Deterministic Seismic Hazard Assessment (NDSHA) method, proposed some twenty years ago, is found to reliably and realistically simulate the wide suite of earthquake ground motions that may impact civil populations as well as their heritage buildings. The scenario-based NDSHA modeling technique is developed from comprehensive physical knowledge of: (i) the seismic source process; (ii) the propagation of earthquake waves; and (iii) their combined interactions with site effects. Thus, NDSHA effectively accounts for the tensor nature of earthquake ground motions: (a) formally described as the tensor product of the earthquake source functions and the Greeds functions of the transmitting (pathway) medium; and (b) more informally described as mathematical arrays of numbers or functions (indices) that transform according to certain rules under a change of coordinates. Importantly, NDSHA therefore uses all available information about the spacial distribution of large magnitude earthquake phenomena, including: (a) Maximum Credible Earthquake (MCE) - which is based on seismic history and seismotectonics; and (b) geological and geophysical data. Thus it does not rely on scalar empirical ground motion attenuation models (GMPEs), as these are often both: (a) weakly constrained by available observations; and (b) fundamentally unable to account for the tensor nature of earthquake ground motions.

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