Ground-motion models for earthquakes occurring in the United Kingdom
Douglas, John and Aldama-Bustos, Guillermo and Tallett-Williams, Sarah and Davi, Manuela and Tromans, Iain J. (2024) Ground-motion models for earthquakes occurring in the United Kingdom. Bulletin of Earthquake Engineering, 22 (9). pp. 4265-4302. ISSN 1573-1456 (https://doi.org/10.1007/s10518-024-01943-8)
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Abstract
This article presents models to predict median horizontal elastic response spectral accelerations for 5% damping from earthquakes with moment magnitudes 3.5 to 7.25 occurring in the United Kingdom. This model was derived using the hybrid stochastic-empirical method based on an existing ground-motion model for California and a stochastic model for the UK, which was developed specifically for this purpose. The model is presented in two consistent formats, both for two distance metrics, with different target end-users. Firstly, we provide a complete logic tree with 162 branches, and associated weights, capturing epistemic uncertainties in the depth to the top of rupture, geometric spreading, anelastic path attenuation, site attenuation and stress drop, which is more likely to be used for research. The weights for these branches were derived using Bayesian updating of a priori weights from expert judgment. Secondly, we provide a backbone model with three and five branches corresponding to different percentiles, with corresponding weights, capturing the overall epistemic uncertainty, which is tailored for engineering applications. The derived models are compared with ground-motion observations, both instrumental and macroseismic, from the UK and surrounding region (northern France, Belgium, the Netherlands, western Germany and western Scandinavia). These comparisons show that the model is well-centred (low overall bias and with no obvious trends with magnitude or distance) and the branches capture the body and range of the technically defensible interpretations. In addition, comparisons with ground-motion models that have been previously used within seismic hazard assessments for the UK show that ground-motion predictions from the proposed model match those from previous models quite closely for most magnitudes and distances. The models are available as subroutines in various computer languages for ease of use.
ORCID iDs
Douglas, John ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3822-0060, Aldama-Bustos, Guillermo, Tallett-Williams, Sarah, Davi, Manuela and Tromans, Iain J.;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 89579 Dates: DateEvent1 July 2024Published9 June 2024Published Online22 May 2024Accepted1 February 2024SubmittedSubjects: Technology > Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
Science > GeologyDepartment: Faculty of Engineering > Civil and Environmental Engineering Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 14 Jun 2024 07:49 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 14:13 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/89579