Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/18195
Title: Speedy techniques to evaluate seismic site effects in particular geomorphologic conditions : faults, cavities, landslides and topographic irregularities
Authors: Panzera, Francesco
Lombardo, Giuseppe
D'Amico, Sebastiano
Galea, Pauline
Keywords: Earthquake zones
Seismic waves
Ambient sounds
Earthquake hazard analysis
Issue Date: 2013
Publisher: InTech
Citation: Panzera, F., Lombardo, G., D'Amico, S., & Galea, P. (2013). Speedy techniques to evaluate seismic site effects in particular geomorphologic conditions : faults, cavities, landslides and topographic irregularities - Engineering seismology, geotechnical and structural earthquake engineering. Rijeka: InTech. 101-145.
Abstract: The ground motion that can be recorded at the free surface of a terrain is the final result of a series of phenomena that can be grouped into three fundamental typologies: the source mechanism, the seismic wave propagation till the bedrock interface below the investigated site and the site effects (Fig. 1). The first two features define the kind of seismic input whereas the third represents all modifications that can occur as a consequence of the interaction between seismic waves and local characteristics of the investigated site. The physical and mechanical properties of terrains as well as their morphologic and stratigraphic features appreciably affect the characteristics of the ground motion observed at the surface. The whole process of modifications undergone by a given seismic input in terms of amplitude, frequency content and duration, as a consequence of local characteristics, is generally termed the “local seismic response”. It is indeed well known that the spectral composition of a seismic event is modified first during the source-bedrock path (attenuation function), and second, when the seismic input interacts with the soft terrains layered between the bedrock and the free surface (Fig. 1a). This latter effect, significantly changes the spectral content so that it is extremely important for estimating the final input to which all structures built in the study area will be subjected.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/18195
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacSciGeo

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