Strong ground motion

In seismology, strong ground motion is the strong earthquake shaking that occurs close to (less than about 50 km from) a causative fault. The strength of the shaking involved in strong ground motion usually overwhelms a seismometer, forcing the use of accelerographs (or strong ground motion accelerometers) for recording. The science of strong ground motion also deals with the variations of fault rupture, both in total displacement, energy released, and rupture velocity.

ShakeMap for the 2001 Nisqually earthquake

As seismic instruments (and accelerometers in particular) become more common, it becomes necessary to correlate expected damage with instrument-readings. The old Modified Mercalli intensity scale (MM), a relic of the pre-instrument days, remains useful in the sense that each intensity-level provides an observable difference in seismic damage.

After many years of trying every possible manipulation of accelerometer-time histories, it turns out that the extremely simple peak ground velocity (PGV) provides the best correlation with damage.[1][2] PGV merely expresses the peak of the first integration of the acceleration record. Accepted formulae now link PGV with MM Intensity. Note that the effect of soft soils gets built into the process, since one can expect that these foundation conditions will amplify the PGV significantly.

"ShakeMaps" are produced by the United States Geological Survey, provide almost-real-time information about significant earthquake events, and can assist disaster-relief teams and other agencies.[3]

Correlation with the Mercalli scale

The United States Geological Survey created the Instrumental Intensity scale, which maps peak ground velocity on an intensity scale comparable to the felt Mercalli scale. Seismologists all across the world use these values to construct ShakeMaps.

Instrumental
Intensity
Velocity
(cm/s)
Perceived shakingPotential damage
I< 0.0215Not feltNone
II–III0.135 – 1.41WeakNone
IV1.41 – 4.65LightNone
V4.65 – 9.64ModerateVery light
VI9.64 – 20StrongLight
VII20 – 41.4Very strongModerate
VIII41.4 – 85.8SevereModerate to heavy
IX85.8 – 178ViolentHeavy
X+> 178ExtremeVery heavy

Notable earthquakes

PGV
(max recorded)
MagDepthFatalitiesEarthquake
318 cm/s[4]7.733 km2,4151999 Jiji earthquake
215 cm/s[5]7.810 km62,0132023 Turkey-Syria Earthquakes
183 cm/s[6]6.718.2 km571994 Northridge earthquake
170 cm/s[4]6.917.6 km6,4341995 Great Hanshin earthquake
152 cm/s[4]6.610 km112007 Chūetsu offshore earthquake
147 cm/s[4]7.31.09 km31992 Landers earthquake
145 cm/s[4]6.613 km682004 Chūetsu earthquake
138 cm/s[4]7.210.5 km356 injured1992 Cape Mendocino earthquakes
117.41 cm/s9.1[7]29 km19,7472011 Tohoku earthquake and tsunami
108 cm/s[8]7.88.2 km8,857April 2015 Nepal earthquake
38 cm/s[9]5.515.5 km02008 Chino Hills earthquake
20 cm/s (est)[10]6.410 km115-1201933 Long Beach earthquake

See also

References

Sources