Open Access
Ground Motion Characteristics Estimated from Spectral Ratio between Horizontal and Verticcl Components of Mietremors.
Katsuaki Konno
- 01 Jan 1997
1.2K
TL;DR: In this article, the spectral ratio between horizontal and vertical components (H/V ratio) of microtremors measured at the ground surface has been used to estimate fundamental periods and amplification factors of a site, although this technique lacks theoretical background.
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Abstract:
The spectral ratio between horizontal and vertical components (H/V ratio) of microtremors measured at the ground surface has been used to estimate fundamental periods and amplification factors of a site, although this technique lacks theoretical background. The aim of this article is to formulate the H/V technique in terms of the characteristics of Rayleigh and Love waves, and to contribute to improve the technique. The improvement includes use of not only peaks but also troughs in the H/V ratio for reliable estimation of the period and use of a newly proposed smoothing function for better estimation of the amplification factor. The formulation leads to a simple formula for the amplification factor expressed with the H/V ratio. With microtremor data measured at 546 junior high schools in 23 wards of Tokyo, the improved technique is applied to mapping site periods and amplification factors in the area.
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Citations
The nature of noise wavefield and its applications for site effects studies A literature review
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the existing scientific literature in order to gather all the available information dealing with the origin and the nature of the ambient seismic noise wavefield, and reveal an overall agreement about the origin of seismic noise and its frequency dependence.
661
Guidelines for the implementation of the H/V spectral ratio technique on ambient vibrations measurements, processing and interpretation
Hans-Balder Havenith
- 01 Jan 2004
TL;DR: In this paper, the application of the H/V technique in assessing local site effects due to dynamic earthquake excitations is the main focus, whereas other applications regarding the static aspects are not considered.
643
H/V ratio: a tool for site effects evaluation. Results from 1-D noise simulations
Sylvette Bonnefoy-Claudet,Cécile Cornou,Pierre-Yves Bard,Fabrice Cotton,Peter Moczo,Peter Moczo,Jozef Kristek,Jozef Kristek,Donat Fäh +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present simulations for a simple realistic site (one sedimentary layer over bedrock) characterized by a rather high impedance contrast and low quality factor, and investigate the link between H/V ratio peaks and the noise wavefield composition for the soil model considered here.
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A theory for microtremor H/V spectral ratio: application for a layered medium
Francisco J. Sánchez-Sesma,Miguel Rodríguez,Ursula Iturrarán-Viveros,Francisco Luzón,Michel Campillo,Ludovic Margerin,Antonio García-Jerez,Martha Suárez,Miguel A. Santoyo,Alejandro Rodríguez-Castellanos +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the average energy density of the motions at a given receiver, in the frequency domain, measures average energy densities and is proportional to the imaginary part of the Green's function when both source and receiver are the same.
335
Geopsy: A User‐Friendly Open‐Source Tool Set for Ambient Vibration Processing
Marc Wathelet,Jean-Luc Chatelain,Cécile Cornou,Giuseppe Di Giulio,Bertrand Guillier,Matthias Ohrnberger,Alexandros Savvaidis +6 more
TL;DR: Geopsy has become a mature multiplatform open-source package that has already been recognized as a reference tool for analyzing ambient vibration data in the context of site characterization studies and a number of lower-level tools guarantee maximum flexibility in accessing and controlling processing results at any stage of the analysis.
317
References
Combining genetic and linearized algorithms for a two-step joint inversion of Rayleigh wave dispersion and H/V spectral ratio curves
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Implications of the 2011 M9.0 Tohoku Japan earthquake for the treatment of site effects in large earthquakes
TL;DR: In this paper, a site response in Japan is characterized using thousands of surface and borehole recordings from events of moment magnitude > 5.5, collected by the KiK-net network, including the 2011 M9.0 Tohoku earthquake.
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Stability and modal analysis of shock/boundary layer interactions
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