Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Supercomputer Unleashes Virtual 9.0 Megaquake in Pacific Northwest

Simulation May Help Big Cities Develop Early Warning Systems

Image: Virtual 9.0 EarthquakeShakes Pacific NorthwestScientists used a supercomputer-driven “virtual earthquake” to explore likely ground shaking in a magnitude 9.0 megathrust earthquake in the Pacific Northwest. Peak ground velocities are displayed in yellow and red. The legend represents speed in meters per second (m/s) with red equaling 2.3 m/s. Although the largest ground motions occur offshore near the fault and decrease eastward, sedimentary basins lying beneath some cities amplify the shaking in Seattle, Tacoma, Olympia, and Vancouver, increasing the risk of damage.Credit: Kim Olsen, SDSU.

On January 26, 1700, at about 9 p.m. local time, the Juan de Fuca plate beneath the ocean in the Pacific Northwest suddenly moved, slipping some 60 feet eastward beneath the North American plate in a monster quake of approximately magnitude 9, setting in motion large tsunamis that struck the coast of North America and traveled to the shores of Japan.
Since then, the earth beneath the region – which includes the cities of Vancouver, Seattle and Portland -- has been relatively quiet. But scientists believe that earthquakes with magnitudes greater than 8, so-called “megathrust events,” occur along this fault on average every 400 to 500 years.
To help prepare for the next megathrust earthquake, a team of researchers led by seismologist Kim Olsen of San Diego State University (SDSU) used a supercomputer-powered “virtual earthquake” program to calculate for the first time realistic three-dimensional simulations that describe the possible impacts of megathrust quakes on the Pacific Northwest region. Also participating in the study were researchers from the San Diego Supercomputer Center at UC San Diego and the U.S. Geological Survey.
What the scientists learned from this simulation is not reassuring, as reported in the Journal of Seismology, particularly for residents of downtown Seattle.
With a rupture scenario beginning in the north and propagating toward the south along the 600-mile long Cascadia Subduction Zone, the ground moved about 1 ½ feet per second in Seattle; nearly 6 inches per second in Tacoma, Olympia and Vancouver; and 3 inches in Portland, Oregon. Additional simulations, especially of earthquakes that begin in the southern part of the rupture zone, suggest that the ground motion under some conditions can be up to twice as large.
“We also found that these high ground velocities were accompanied by significant low-frequency shaking, like what you feel in a roller coaster, that lasted as long as five minutes – and that’s a long time,” said Olsen.
The long-duration shaking, combined with high ground velocities, raises the possibility that such an earthquake could inflict major damage on metropolitan areas -- especially on high-rise buildings in downtown Seattle. Compounding the risks, like Los Angeles to the south, Seattle, Tacoma, and Olympia sit on top of sediment-filled geological basins that are prone to greatly amplifying the waves generated by major earthquakes.
“One thing these studies will hopefully do is to raise awareness of the possibility of megathrust earthquakes happening at any given time in the Pacific Northwest,” said Olsen. “Because these events will tend to occur several hundred kilometers from major cities, the study also implies that the region could benefit from an early warning system that can allow time for protective actions before the brunt of the shaking starts.” Depending on how far the earthquake is from a city, early warning systems could give from a few seconds to a few tens of seconds to implement measures, such as automatically stopping trains and elevators.
Added Olsen, “The information from these simulations can also play a role in research into the hazards posed by large tsunamis, which can originate from such megathrust earthquakes like the ones generated in the 2004 Sumatra-Andeman earthquake in Indonesia.” One of the largest earthquakes ever recorded, the magnitude 9.2 Sumatra-Andeman event was felt as far away as Bangladesh, India, and Malaysia, and triggered devastating tsunamis that killed more than 200,000 people.
In addition to increasing scientific understanding of these massive earthquakes, the results of the simulations can also be used to guide emergency planners, to improve building codes, and help engineers design safer structures -- potentially saving lives and property in this region of some 9 million people.
Even with the large supercomputing and data resources at SDSC, creating “virtual earthquakes” is a daunting task. The computations to prepare initial conditions were carried out on SDSC’s DataStar supercomputer, and then the resulting information was transferred for the main simulations to the center’s Blue Gene Data supercomputer via SDSC’s advanced virtual file system or GPFS-WAN, which makes data seamlessly available on different – sometimes distant – supercomputers.
Coordinating the simulations required a complex choreography of moving information into and out of the supercomputer as Olsen’s sophisticated “Anelastic Wave Model” simulation code was running. Completing just one of several simulations, running on 2,000 supercomputer processors, required some 80,000 processor hours – equal to running one program continuously on your PC for more than 9 years!
“To solve the new challenges that arise when researchers need to run their codes at the largest scales, and data sets grow to great size, we worked closely with the earthquake scientists through several years of code optimization and modifications,” said SDSC computational scientist Yifeng Cui, who contributed numerous refinements to allow the computer model to “scale up” to capture a magnitude 9 earthquake over such a vast area.
In order to run the simulations, the scientists must recreate in their model the components that encompass all the important aspects of the earthquake. One component is an accurate representation of the earth’s subsurface layering, and how its structure will bend, reflect, and change the size and direction of the traveling earthquake waves. Co-author William Stephenson of the USGS worked with Olsen and Andreas Geisselmeyer, from Ulm University in Germany, to create the first unified “velocity model” of the layering for this entire region, extending from British Columbia to Northern California.
Another component is a model of the earthquake source from the slipping of the Juan de Fuca plate underneath the North American plate. Making use of the extensive measurements of the massive 2004 Sumatra-Andeman earthquake in Indonesia, the scientists developed a model of the earthquake source for similar megathrust earthquakes in the Pacific Northwest.
The sheer physical size of the region in the study was also challenging. The scientists included in their virtual model an immense slab of the earth more than 650 miles long by 340 miles by 30 miles deep -- more than 7 million cubic miles -- and used a computer mesh spacing of 250 meters to divide the volume into some 2 billion cubes. This mesh size allows the simulations to model frequencies up to 0.5 Hertz, which especially affect tall buildings.
“One of the strengths of an earthquake simulation model is that it lets us run scenarios of different earthquakes to explore how they may affect ground motion,” said Olsen. Because the accumulated stresses or “slip deficit” can be released in either one large event or several smaller events, the scientists ran scenarios for earthquakes of different sizes.
“We found that the magnitude 9 scenarios generate peak ground velocities five to 10 times larger than those from the smaller magnitude 8.5 quakes.”
The researchers are planning to conduct additional simulations to explore the range of impacts that depend on where the earthquake starts, the direction of travel of the rupture along the fault, and other factors that can vary.
This research was supported by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Geological Survey, the Southern California Earthquake Center, and computing time on an NSF supercomputer at SDSC.

Source: UC San Diego News Center

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Alumni Banquet 2008

Pictures now online!




Click here to View picture from the Banquet

The Department Photogallery

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

SEMINAR - Eric Dunham

Earthquake Modeling: From Fault Friction to Seismic Hazard

Eric Dunham
Earth and Planetary Sciences
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
Harvard University


Earthquakes occur when the two sides of a fault slip in response to a rapid weakening of the fault's frictional strength. In this talk, I will discuss some of the physical processes occurring within the fault zone during seismic events (e.g., shear heating of pore fluids, poroelastic response to compressional or extensional stresses, melting of microscopic frictional contacts) and computational models that simultaneously solve for the transport of fluid and energy in the fault zone together with the elastodynamic response of the rocks surrounding the fault. I will also discuss how dynamic earthquake models are in the process of changing seismic hazard analysis.


Monday, February 18, 2008

Eric Frost Honored by NIUSR

The National Institute for Urban Search and Rescue (NIUSR) recently presented their prestigious Eagle Award for Leadership to Eric Frost, a professor in the department of Geological Sciences.
The bronze NIUSR Eagle Award for leadership is presented annually to individuals or organizations that represent the best of not only preparing, but also participating in emergency preparedness, as well as those who are leaders in the real-world implementation of emergency response procedures.Presenting the award on behalf of NIUSR to Frost was Linton Wells, II, the previous award winner.
Lois Clark McCoy told reporters, "What the Executive Board of NIUSR likes most about Frost is that he keeps a humble mane and doesn’t need or seek fame or glory," said Lois Clark McCoy. "What he and his team do is prepare for and participate in everything from exercises to real-world assistance in disasters of all types."
To say that Frost is a pioneer when it comes to emergency planning and response would be to understate what he has done to not only bring together the resources of SDSU State and first responders, but also in his pursuit to prepare future leaders in the field. As co-director of SDSU's Homeland Security program, Frost is making sure that when the baton of leading during emergencies is transferred, there will be a generation of leaders ready to run with it.Frost can often be found in the SDSU Visualization Center. During the fires of October 2007, the Viz Lab, as students and staff affectionately know it, was a flurry of activity as Frost and other SDSU students and faculty assisted with the real-time transfer of information to emergency responders and the media.
It is the mission of NIUSR to bring together people from all walks of life and all levels of emergency preparedness and response in order to help shape a safer future for the people of the world. Honoring Frost for his efforts to lead during drills and exercises and being on the ground preparing leaders of the future is something that NIUSR is honored to do.

source: SDSUniverse

Monday, February 11, 2008

SEMINAR - Phil Wannamaker

Evolution of Fluid and Deformation Regimes in Extensional and Transpressional Tectonism Revealed Through Electrical Resistivity Structure, with Implications for Seismicity, Gold Occurences and Geothermal Resources

Phil Wannamaker
Energy and Geoscience Institute
University of Utah

Deformation of the continents is heterogeneous and reflects the interplay between force and strength. Variations of crustal strength in both brittle and ductile regimes have fluid variation and thermal contrasts as principal controls. These physical properties and other geochemical fluxes can be mapped according to their electrical conductivity using EM survey methods, mainly magnetotellurics (MT). Such weaknesses in lithospheric deformation can be primary inputs to geodynamic models considering e.g. body forces, and geochemical flows implied from geophysical structure can provide insight to permeability pathways and ore deposition. Conductivity provides a strong complement to seismic velocity as a physical property because, in addition to basic structural geometries, it provides unique information on geochemistry and petrology of the deep crust and upper mantle. These concepts will be exemplified in two large-scale integrative studies. The first is over the actively extensional Great Basin and its transition to the Colorado Plateau through Nevada and Utah. These data are revealing probable mantle upwelling zones with anisotropic melt textures, emplacement of basaltic melts into the lower crust, complex fluid exsolution therefrom, and crustal scale detachment zones overhead some of which feed into recognized geothermal systems. Here we are glimpsing many of the processes operant during the early-middle stages of continental margin development, whether the Great Basin is headed that far or not. The second is across the active transpressional orogen of the New Zealand South Island. In the continuum deformation regime of the central island, MT has imaged a root zone of prograde metamorphism and fluid generation impacting crustal rheology, large-scale deformation, a framework for large earthquakes along the Alpine Fault, and migration of gold-bearing fluids in a globally relevant ore deposits model. In a new companion transect of the Marlborough strike slip fault system to the north, the advancing subduction zone has induced distinct conductivity structures interpreted to reflect deep hydrate breakdown, shear-interconnected fluids in holding zones below the brittle-ductile transition, and fault-fracture meshes above the brittle-ductile due to shallow plate dewatering. MT with its wide data bandwidth has the potential to follow thermal and fluid processes from upper mantle source regions, through deep crustal storage and transformation, to upper crustal deposition and dispersal zones.


Tuesday, February 5, 2008

SEMINAR - Po Chen

A Unified Approach to Full-3D Waveform Tomography and Seismic Source Inversion

Po Chen
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
Columbia University

Seismic hazard analysis depends upon seismology to quantify both the seismic sources that generate seismic waves and the Earth structure through which seismic waves propagate. In this talk, I will present a unified approach for iteratively improving the 3D Earth structure model and seismic source models by solving the elastic/anelastic seismic wave equation using purely numerical methods such as finite-difference. First, I will start with an introduction to the background and motivation, which is primarily focused on ground-motion quantification and prediction. Second, I’ll explain how we can quantify the misfit between model-predicted waveforms and the observed waveforms using time- and frequency-dependent phase-delay and amplitude anomalies and how we can use them to evaluate the quality of a given structural or source model. Third, I will introduce the concept of receiver Green tensor (RGT) and its central role in constructing the partial derivatives needed for near-real-time seismic source parameter inversions and the Fréchet kernels for full-3D waveform tomography. Fourth, I’ll present the results that we have obtained from applying this unified approach to the Los Angeles region. Last, I’ll end my talk with a short discussion of some on-going research and a summary.

Monday, February 4, 2008

ALUMNI BANQUET - FEBRUARY 22, 2008

SAN DlEGO STATE UNIVERSITY
DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGICAL SCIENCES
ANNUAL BANQUET - FEBRUARY 22, 2008

sponsored by
SDSU GEOLOGY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
(aka "FRIENDS OF THE DEPARTMENT")


This year's banquet will be held at the San Diego Natural History Museum in Balboa Park in San Diego. The Friday evening event begins with a social hour at 6pm and dinner at 7pm. The meal will be followed by a program including a department update and recognition of retiring professors, Dr. Clive Dorman and Dr. Gary Peterson. The evening will also include a presentation to and by Dr. Gary L. Peterson, this year's recipient of the Baylor Brooks Honored Alumni Award.

The Mexican buffet dinner will likely include quesadillas, flautas, chipslsalsa, beans, rice, tortillas, fajitas, carnitas, guacamole, salsa and all the accompaniments to build awesome tacos and burritos! Water, soft drinks, wine and beer are included with this year's banquet fee.

As a fund-raiser to partially fund students' banquet meals and other Alumni Association activities, we will have a silent auction that will be set up at the beginning of the evening and will conclude after the evening's program. If you have any items to donate to the auction, please bring them We sincerely appreciate your donations!

The San Diego Natural History Museum is located in Balboa Park. Directions are available at http://www.sdnhm.org/. Use the north entrance. For banquet reservations, please complete the attached form. For more info, contact Sue, sdsuneoalum@att.net

CURRENT SDSU GEO-STUDENTS - At least 50 percent of your banquet fee will be reimbursed IF you make a reservation AND show up at the banquet!!! And, remember, SDSU geo-alumni may be your future employers (and are a great bunch of people to know! You're gonna be one of them!)

Reservation Form



$$$ REQUESTS FOR ADDITIONAL DONATIONS $$$
"FRIENDS OF THE DEPARTMENT"
(aka SDSU Geoloav Alumni Association)
The Friends of the Department (your SDSU Geology Alumni Association) is active year-round, currently does not solicit dues from the alumni on the mailing list, and (because our checking account balance is low) requests your assistance in funding our annual activities such as:
  • Help fund student meal costs at the annual banquet
  • Assist with expenses for our honored alumnus of the year
  • Maintain a plaque in the department with nameplates of our honored alumni
  • Prepare, distribute and email info regarding our events
  • Maintain and update email group list
  • Provide scholarship funds to SDSU geology department students
  • Buy and donate equipment needed by the department

Your donation is sincerely appreciated and may be submitted with your banquet reservation form.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR SUPPORT!