The SCEC Broadband Platform: Open-Source Software for Strong Ground Motion Simulation and Validation
Date: 4/25/2019
Time: 06:00 PM
Room: Grand Ballroom
The Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC) Broadband Platform (BBP) is a carefully integrated and validated collection of open-source scientific software programs that can simulate broadband (0-20+ Hz) ground motions for earthquakes at regional scales. The BBP is a research tool that uses earthquake rupture and wave propagation modeling software to simulate ground motions from earthquakes.
The BBP scientific software modules implement kinematic rupture generation, low- and high-frequency seismogram synthesis using 3D wave propagation through 1D layered velocity structures, a site-effects module, several ground motion intensity measure calculations, and various ground motion goodness-of-fit tools. These modules are integrated into a software system that provides user-defined, repeatable calculation of ground-motion seismograms, using alternative simulation methods, and software utilities to generate tables, plots, and maps. The BBP has been developed over the last eight years in a collaborative project involving geoscientists, earthquake engineers, graduate students, and SCEC software developers.
The SCEC BBP software can be compiled and run on recent Linux systems with GNU compilers. The Broadband Platform continues to evolve, and new versions of the BBP are released periodically on GitHub. The latest release includes seven simulation methods, nine simulation regions covering California, Japan, Central and Eastern North America, and the ability to compare simulation results against empirical ground motion models. The newest features include the ability to simulate multi-segment ruptures using several simulation methods. And, in addition to a new simulation method, it now includes improvements to several existing ground motion simulation methods and revised Green’s functions for all simulation regions. In this release, the site response module is integrated with all simulation methods and can also be used for comparing simulated data against historical earthquakes.
Presenting Author: Christine A. Goulet
Authors
Fabio Silva fsilva@usc.edu Southern California Earthquake Center, Los Angeles, California, United States Corresponding Author
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Philip J Maechling maechlin@usc.edu Southern California Earthquake Center, Los Angeles, California, United States |
Christine A Goulet cgoulet@usc.edu Southern California Earthquake Center, Los Angeles, California, United States Presenting Author
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The SCEC Broadband Platform: Open-Source Software for Strong Ground Motion Simulation and Validation
Category
Numerical Modeling of Earthquake Ground Motion, Seismic Noise, Rupture Dynamics and Seismic Wave Propagation