Group A, Poster #243, Ground Motions
The SCEC Broadband Platform: Open-Source Software for Strong Ground Motion Simulation and Validation
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Poster Presentation
2022 SCEC Annual Meeting, Poster #243, SCEC Contribution #12527 VIEW PDF
ware system that provides user-defined, repeatable calculation of ground-motion seismograms, using alternative simulation methods, and software utilities to generate tables, plots, and maps.
The BBP has been developed over the last eleven years as a collaborative project involving researchers, graduate students and practitioners from seismology and earthquake engineering, and the SCEC research computing group. The Broadband Platform version 22.4 is distributed as an open-source software that can be compiled and run on recent Linux systems with GNU compilers. The distribution includes seven simulation methods, ten simulation regions covering California, Japan, Central Italy, Central and Eastern North America, and the ability to compare simulation results against empirical ground motion models. Recent BBP developments include significant improvements to several simulation methods, the ability to simulate multi-segment ruptures, and the addition of a validation module based on Fourier Amplitude Spectra (FAS), in addition to the previously implemented Pseudo-Spectral Acceleration Spectra metrics needed for engineering applications. This will allow better seismological interpretations of the simulation results. We will cover various BBP capabilities and validation tools included in the Broadband Platform and will present initial FAS-based results from various validation events in several California regions.
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The BBP has been developed over the last eleven years as a collaborative project involving researchers, graduate students and practitioners from seismology and earthquake engineering, and the SCEC research computing group. The Broadband Platform version 22.4 is distributed as an open-source software that can be compiled and run on recent Linux systems with GNU compilers. The distribution includes seven simulation methods, ten simulation regions covering California, Japan, Central Italy, Central and Eastern North America, and the ability to compare simulation results against empirical ground motion models. Recent BBP developments include significant improvements to several simulation methods, the ability to simulate multi-segment ruptures, and the addition of a validation module based on Fourier Amplitude Spectra (FAS), in addition to the previously implemented Pseudo-Spectral Acceleration Spectra metrics needed for engineering applications. This will allow better seismological interpretations of the simulation results. We will cover various BBP capabilities and validation tools included in the Broadband Platform and will present initial FAS-based results from various validation events in several California regions.
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