Exciting news! We're transitioning to the Statewide California Earthquake Center. Our new website is under construction, but we'll continue using this website for SCEC business in the meantime. We're also archiving the Southern Center site to preserve its rich history. A new and improved platform is coming soon!

Influence of Dip and Velocity Heterogeneity on Reverse- and Normal-Faulting Rupture Dynamics and Near-Fault Ground Motions

Richard O'Connell, Shuo Ma, & Ralph J. Archuleta

Published December 2007, SCEC Contribution #1100

We investigate the influence of fault dip (35°–60°) and crustal velocity heterogeneity on rupture dynamics and near-fault ground motions from normal- and reverse-faulting. The same initial conditions were used, except for the direction of initial shear stress, in each dynamic rupture calculation. We used two 3D elastic finite-element approaches that employ split nodes for the computations. In homogeneous and weakly heterogeneous half-spaces with faults dipping lsim50°, maximum fault-normal peak velocities occurred on the hanging wall. However, for fault dips {gtrsim}50°, maximum fault-normal peak velocities occurred on the footwall. Bilateral and unilateral rupture simulations in weakly heterogeneous media found that reverse-faulting slip velocities (frequency band 1–3.5 Hz) were on average 39% larger than those during normal faulting. However, on average reverse-faulting slip velocities were only 16% larger than normal-faulting slip velocities for frequencies <1 Hz. This suggests that normal-faulting ground motions may have peak spectral accelerations at distinctly lower frequencies than reverse-faulting ground motions. Normal faults often juxtapose a low-velocity hanging-wall sedimentary basin against relatively stiff footwall rocks. A 3D velocity model was constructed with a thick (several kilometers) low-velocity basin with a strong shear-wave velocity contrast (factor of 3) across a fault dipping 55°. While the strong lateral velocity contrast reduced normal-faulting fault-normal peak velocities on the footwall, substantial (0.5–1 m/sec) fault-normal peak velocities remained on the footwall. Meanwhile even larger fault-normal peak velocities occurred on the more compliant hanging wall. These results indicate that simple amplitude parameterizations based on the hanging wall and/or footwall and the fault normal and/or fault parallel currently used in ground motion prediction relations may not be appropriate for some faults with dips >50°.

Citation
O'Connell, R., Ma, S., & Archuleta, R. J. (2007). Influence of Dip and Velocity Heterogeneity on Reverse- and Normal-Faulting Rupture Dynamics and Near-Fault Ground Motions. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America, 97(6), 1970-1989. doi: 10.1785/0120070042.