Chapter 5: Calculating Earthquake Probabilities for the SFBR - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 31
About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 5: Calculating Earthquake Probabilities for the SFBR

Description:

Chapter 5: Calculating Earthquake Probabilities for the SFBR Mei Xue EQW March 16 Outline Introduction to Probability Calculations Calculating Probabilities ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:96
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 32
Provided by: seismoBer
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 5: Calculating Earthquake Probabilities for the SFBR


1
Chapter 5 Calculating Earthquake Probabilities
for the SFBR
  • Mei Xue
  • EQW March 16

2
Outline
  • Introduction to Probability Calculations
  • Calculating Probabilities
  • Probability Models Used in the Calcuations
  • Final calculation steps

3
Introduction to Probability Calculations
4
Introduction to Probability Calculations
  • Earthquake probability is calculated over the
    time periods of 1-, 5-, 10-, 20-, 30- and
    100-year-long intervals beginning in 2002
  • The input is a regional model of the long-term
    production rate of earthquakes in the SFBR
    (Chapter 4)
  • The second part of the calculation sequence is
    where the time-dependent effects enter into the
    WG02 model

5
Introduction to Probability Calculations
  • Review what time-dependent factors are believed
    to be important and introduce several models for
    quantifying their effects
  • The models involve two inter-related areas
    recurrence and interaction

6
Introduction to Probability Calculations
  • Express the likelihood of occurrence of one or
    more M?6.7 EQs in the SFBR in the time periods in
    five ways
  • The probability for each characterized large EQ
    rupture source (35)
  • The probability that a particular fault segment
    will be ruptured by a large EQ (18)
  • The probability that a large EQ will occur on any
    of the 7 characterized fault systems
  • The probability of a background EQ (on faults in
    the SFBR, but not on one of the 7)
  • The probability that a large EQ will occur
    somewhere in the region

7
Calculating Probabilities
  • Primary input the rupture source mean occurrence
    rate (Table 4.8)
  • The probability rupture source, each fault,
    combined with background -gt the probability for
    the region as a whole

8
Calculating Probabilities
  • They model EQs that rupture a fault segment as a
    renewal process independent
  • Probability Models
  • Poisson the probability is constant in time and
    thus fully determined by the long-term rate of
    occurrence of the rupture source
  • Empirical model a variant of the Poisson, the
    recent regional rate of EQs
  • Time-varying probability models BPT, BPT-step
    (1906, 1989), and Time-predictable (1906), take
    into account information about the last EQ

9
Calculating Probabilities
Survivor function gives the probability that at
least time T will elapse between successive events
hazard function gives the instantaneous rate
of failure at time t conditional upon no event
having occurred up to time t
Conditional probability gives the
Probability that one or more EQs will occur on a
rupture source of interest during an interval of
interest, conditional upon it not having occurred
by T (year 2002)
10
Five Probability Models1 Poisoon Model
? - the mean rupture rate of each rupture source
  • The hazard function is constant
  • Fails to incorporate the most basic physics of
    the earthquake process reloading
  • Fails to account for stress shadow
  • Reflects only the long-term rates
  • Conservative estimate for faults that
    time-dependent models are either too poorly
    constrained or missing some critical physics
    (interaction)

11
(No Transcript)
12
Five Probability Models2 Empirical Model
  • ?(t) not stationary, estimated from the
    historical EQ record (M ? 3.0 since 1942 and M ?
    5.5 since 1906)
  • - the long term mean rate
  • Complements the other models as M ? 5.5 is not
    used by other models
  • Take into account the effect of the 1906 EQ
    stress shadow
  • Specifies only time-dependence, preserving the
    magnitude distribution of the rupture sources

13
The shape of the magnitude distribution on each
fault remains unchanged the whole distribution
moves up and down in time
14
(No Transcript)
15
Summary of rates and 30-year probabilities of EQs
(M?6.7) in SFBR calculated with various models
16
  • Assumptions
  • Fluctuations in the rate of M ? 3.0 and M ? 5.5
    EQs reflect fluctuations in the probability of
    larger events
  • Fluctuations in rate on individual faults are
    correlated (though stress shadow is not
    homogeneous in space, affected seismicity on all
    magjor faults in the region)
  • The rate function ?(t) can be sensibly
    extrapolated forward in time

17
Five Probability Models3 BPT Model
µ the mean recurrence interval, 1/? a the
aperiodicity, the variability of recurrence
times, related to the variance ?2, equals ?/µ
A Poisson process when a1/sqrt(2)
18
  • For smaller a, strongly peaked, remains close to
    zero longer
  • For larger a, dead time becomes shorter,
    increasingly Poisson-like

19
Estimates of aperiodicity a obtained by Ellsworth
et al. (1999) for 37 EQ secquences (histogram)
and the WG02 model (solid line)
20
Five Probability Models4 BPT-step Model
  • A variation of the BPT model
  • Account for the effects of stress changes caused
    by other earthquakes on the segment under
    consideration (1906, 1989)
  • Interaction in the BPT-step model occurs through
    the state variable

21
  • A decrease in the average stress on a segment
    lowers the probability of failure, while an
    increase in average stress causes an increase in
    probability
  • The effects are strongest when the segment is
    near failure

22
  • Assumptions
  • The model represents the statistics of recurrence
    intervals for segment rupture
  • The time of the most recent event is known or
    constrained
  • The effects of interactions are properly
    characterized (BPT-step, 1906, 1989 San Andreas
    only)

23
Five Probability Models5 Time Predictable Model
  • The next EQ will occur when tectonic loading
    restores the stress released in the most recent
    EQ
  • Dividing the slip in the most recent EQ by the
    fault slip rate approximates the expected time to
    the next earthquake
  • Only time of next EQ not size
  • Only for the SAF fault

24
Five Probability Models5 Time Predictable Model
  • Four extensions
  • Model the SFBR as a network of faults
  • Strictly gives the probability that a rupture
    will start on a segment
  • Fault segments can rupture in more than one way
  • Use Monte Carlo sampling of the parent
    distributions to propagate uncertainty through
    the model

25
Five Probability Models5 Time Predictable Model
  • Six-step calculation sequence
  • Slip in the most recent event
  • Slip rate of the segment
  • Expected time of the next rupture of the segment
  • Probability of a rupture starting on the segment
    (4 segments, ignoring interaction, BPT model)
    Epicentral probabilities
  • Convert epicentral probabilities into earthquake
    probabilities

26
Five Probability Models5 Time Predictable Model
  • 6. Compute 30-year source probabilities

27
Final calculation steps
  • Probabilities for fault segments and fault
    systems
  • Probabilities for earthquakes in the background
  • Weighting alternative probability models (VOTE)
  • Probabilities for the SFBR model

28
(No Transcript)
29
(No Transcript)
30
(No Transcript)
31
Paper recommendataions
  • Reasenberg, P.A., Hanks, T.C., and Bakun, W.H.,
    2003, An empirical model for earthquake
    probabilities in the San Francisco Bay region,
    California, 2002-2031, BSSA 93 (1) 1-13 FEB 2003
  • Shimazaki, K., and Nakata, T., Time-predictable
    recurrence model for large earthquakes
    Geophysical Research Letters, v. 7, p. 279-282,
    1980
  • Ellsworth, W.L., Matthews, M.V., Nadeau, R.M.,
    Nishenko, S.P., Reasenberg, P.A., and Simpson,
    R.W., A physically-based earthquake recurrence
    model for estimation of long-term earthquake
    probabilities USGS, OFR 99-522, 23 p., 1999
  • Cornell, C.A., and Winterstein, S.R., Temporal
    and magnitude dependence in earthquake recurrence
    models BSSA, v. 78, no. 4, p. 1522-1537, 1988
  • Harris, R.A., and Simpson, R.W., Changes in
    static stress on Southern California faults after
    the 1992 Landers earthquake Nature, v. 360, no.
    6401, p. 251-254, 1992
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com