Seismic Hazard Deaggregation
Seismic hazard deaggregation (also spelled disaggregation) is the post-processing step that opens up a probabilistic seismic hazard result to reveal which earthquakes actually drive it. A probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (PSHA) integrates over all magnitudes, distances, and ground-motion variability to return a single mean rate at which a ground-motion level is exceeded, but in doing so it loses sight of the individual scenarios. Bazzurro and Cornell's 1999 paper formalized how to invert this aggregation, expressing the contribution to the exceedance rate as a probability distribution over magnitude, distance, and epsilon — the number of standard deviations a target motion sits above the median prediction. The result identifies the controlling earthquake: the magnitude-distance-epsilon combination most responsible for the hazard at a chosen return period. This deaggregation is what lets engineers select realistic scenario earthquakes and ground-motion records for design and analysis. It bridges the probabilistic and deterministic worlds by naming the events hidden inside the integral.
Kilderegistrering
Citater kopieret ordret fra metodens kilderegistrering. Ingen påstandsniveauverifikation er udledt heraf.
- Bazzurro, P., & Cornell, C. A. (1999). Disaggregation of Seismic Hazard. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 89(2), 501-520. · DOI 10.1785/BSSA0890020501
- Cornell, C. A. (1968). Engineering Seismic Risk Analysis. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 58(5), 1583-1606. · DOI 10.1785/BSSA0580051583
Kuraterede påstande
Påstande gemt i bevis-loggen, hver med sin egen vurdering.
Denne visning opfinder ikke en påstandsvurdering, når loggen ingen har.
Relaterede metoder
Genereret fra metodegrafen og vist som maskinelt foreslåede relationer — ingen bevispåstand er udledt.