Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Noise-based estimation of local seismic amplification in an industrialized area of the French Rhone Valley

View through CrossRef
<p>Shallow sedimentary layers have a strong impact on seismic motion. These so-called site effects may be responsible for dramatic ground motion amplification and increase the duration of shaking when an earthquake occurs. The quantification of such amplification effects for specific sites might be challenging to carry out in low-to-moderate seismicity regions where moderate to large earthquakes have long return periods. Therefore, methods based on background ambient noise might be of great interest for these areas.</p><p>In this study, we investigate the potential of ambient noise in ground motion amplification assessment through SSRn (noise-based Standard Spectral Ratio) and SSRh (hybrid Standard Spectral Ratio, Perron et al., 2018) computation. We continuously recorded ambient noise from February to March 2020 on a 400-sensor seismic array covering an area of about 10 x 10 km in the Tricastin industrial region (French Rhone Valley) where critical facilities are located. This area is located on a very elongated valley, filled with Pliocene sediments (sands and clays), that was dug during the Messinian Salinity Crisis in Cretaceous sandstones and limestones. The strong lithological contrast between the sedimentary filling and the bedrock, as well as the valley's incised geometry, is prone to generate strong and complicated site effects.</p><p>Previous studies have shown that SSRn is not able to reproduce earthquake-based SSR amplification factor for frequencies higher than 1 Hz. This disagreement may be explained by the influence of local noise sources. Here, we introduce an approach to mitigate the influence of strong local sources in SSRn and SSRh. Our workflow relies on a clustering algorithm to select the Fourier Amplitude Spectrum (FAS) used in the SSRn and SSRh computation. By applying this method, we were able to remove strong anthropic transient signals at some sites and therefore improve the amplification assessment above 1Hz through the SSRn and SSRh. However, half part of the array is located nearby permanent anthropic sources that remain a major issue in quantifying the amplification at the scale of the valley. This study provides some insights into the conditions of applications of SSRn and SSRh in noisy industrialized environments.</p>
Title: Noise-based estimation of local seismic amplification in an industrialized area of the French Rhone Valley
Description:
<p>Shallow sedimentary layers have a strong impact on seismic motion.
These so-called site effects may be responsible for dramatic ground motion amplification and increase the duration of shaking when an earthquake occurs.
The quantification of such amplification effects for specific sites might be challenging to carry out in low-to-moderate seismicity regions where moderate to large earthquakes have long return periods.
Therefore, methods based on background ambient noise might be of great interest for these areas.
</p><p>In this study, we investigate the potential of ambient noise in ground motion amplification assessment through SSRn (noise-based Standard Spectral Ratio) and SSRh (hybrid Standard Spectral Ratio, Perron et al.
, 2018) computation.
We continuously recorded ambient noise from February to March 2020 on a 400-sensor seismic array covering an area of about 10 x 10 km in the Tricastin industrial region (French Rhone Valley) where critical facilities are located.
This area is located on a very elongated valley, filled with Pliocene sediments (sands and clays), that was dug during the Messinian Salinity Crisis in Cretaceous sandstones and limestones.
The strong lithological contrast between the sedimentary filling and the bedrock, as well as the valley's incised geometry, is prone to generate strong and complicated site effects.
</p><p>Previous studies have shown that SSRn is not able to reproduce earthquake-based SSR amplification factor for frequencies higher than 1 Hz.
This disagreement may be explained by the influence of local noise sources.
Here, we introduce an approach to mitigate the influence of strong local sources in SSRn and SSRh.
Our workflow relies on a clustering algorithm to select the Fourier Amplitude Spectrum (FAS) used in the SSRn and SSRh computation.
By applying this method, we were able to remove strong anthropic transient signals at some sites and therefore improve the amplification assessment above 1Hz through the SSRn and SSRh.
However, half part of the array is located nearby permanent anthropic sources that remain a major issue in quantifying the amplification at the scale of the valley.
This study provides some insights into the conditions of applications of SSRn and SSRh in noisy industrialized environments.
</p>.

Related Results

Seismic Frequency Enhancement for Mapping and Reservoir Characterization of Arab Formation: Case Study Onshore UAE
Seismic Frequency Enhancement for Mapping and Reservoir Characterization of Arab Formation: Case Study Onshore UAE
Abstract Mapping and discrimination of Upper Jurassic Arab reservoirs (Arab A/B/C and D) in this 3D seismic onshore field of Abu Dhabi, is very sensitive to the seis...
Study on the extremely large seismic ground motion amplification on weak-motion seismograms from the Gongquan valley
Study on the extremely large seismic ground motion amplification on weak-motion seismograms from the Gongquan valley
The Ms 6.0 Changning Earthquake in 2019 caused severe damage to Gongquan Town, Sichuan. Our on-site investigation of seismic damage found that the three-dimensional topography and ...
4D Seismic on Gullfaks
4D Seismic on Gullfaks
SUMMARY New technologies are rapidly emerging helping to obtain optimal drainage of large reservoirs. 4D seismic is such a reservoir monitoring technique. The phy...
Integrated Hydrocarbon Detection Based on Full Frequency Pre-Stack Seismic Inversion
Integrated Hydrocarbon Detection Based on Full Frequency Pre-Stack Seismic Inversion
Abstract To improve the accuracy of hydrocarbon detection, seismic amplitude variation with offset (AVO), seismic amplitude variation with frequency (AVF), and direc...
Arrival Picking for Distributed Acoustic Sensing seismic based on fractional lower order statistics
Arrival Picking for Distributed Acoustic Sensing seismic based on fractional lower order statistics
In recent years, fiber-optic distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) has been gradually applied to seismology because of its long-distance and dense observation capability. It is a grea...
Drainage reorganization disrupts scaling between drainage area and valley width
Drainage reorganization disrupts scaling between drainage area and valley width
Valley width is a fundamental morphologic property of rivers that plays a key role in drainage networks' hydrology, ecology, and geomorphology. In many cases, defining and measurin...
Future Directions of Multicomponent Seismic Methods in the Marine Environment
Future Directions of Multicomponent Seismic Methods in the Marine Environment
Abstract Multicomponent seismic recording (4C) is becoming more common in several offshore seismic applications. Faithfully recording all Cartesian components of ...
MARS-seq2.0: an experimental and analytical pipeline for indexed sorting combined with single-cell RNA sequencing v1
MARS-seq2.0: an experimental and analytical pipeline for indexed sorting combined with single-cell RNA sequencing v1
Human tissues comprise trillions of cells that populate a complex space of molecular phenotypes and functions and that vary in abundance by 4–9 orders of magnitude. Relying solely ...

Back to Top