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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2015-06-09
    Description: We investigate the influence of building height on the ability of people to feel earthquakes and observe that, in an urban area, short and tall buildings reach different levels of excitation. We quantify this behavior by analyzing macroseismic reports collected from individuals through the Internet; we focus on elastic regime transitory effects of recent earthquakes in Italy in the local magnitude ( M L ) range of 3–5.9. We find a maximum difference of 0.6 intensity units between the top floors of tall (7–10 stories) and short (1–2 stories) buildings at the highest considered magnitudes. As expected, tall buildings experience greater shaking than short buildings during large earthquakes at large source distances. However, we observe the opposite behavior at close distances when the M L is 〈3.5. These results can be explained by considering the different spectra radiated by small and large earthquakes and the different fundamental mode resonances of buildings (i.e., shorter buildings have higher resonance frequencies and vice versa). Using idealized building models excited by real acceleration time histories, we compute synthetic accelerograms on the top floors of short and tall buildings and confirm the trend of the observed differences in felt intensities.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2013-06-08
    Description: The mainshock and moderate-magnitude aftershocks of the 6 April 2009 M  6.3 L’Aquila seismic sequence, about 90 km northeast of Rome, provided the first earthquake ground-motion recordings in the urban area of Rome. Before those recordings were obtained, the assessments of the seismic hazard in Rome were based on intensity observations and theoretical considerations. The L’Aquila recordings offer an unprecedented opportunity to calibrate the city response to central Apennine earthquakes—earthquakes that have been responsible for the largest damage to Rome in historical times. Using the data recorded in Rome in April 2009, we show that (1) published theoretical predictions of a 1 s resonance in the Tiber valley are confirmed by observations showing a significant amplitude increase in response spectra at that period, (2) the empirical soil-transfer functions inferred from spectral ratios are satisfactorily fit through 1D models using the available geological, geophysical, and laboratory data, but local variability can be large for individual events, (3) response spectra for the motions recorded in Rome from the L’Aquila earthquakes are significantly amplified in the radial component at periods near 1 s, even at a firm site on volcanic rocks, and (4) short-period response spectra are smaller than expected when compared to ground-motion predictions from equations based on a global dataset, whereas the observed response spectra are higher than expected for periods near 1 s. Online Material: Velocity models used in computing theoretical site response.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2012-03-01
    Description: INTRODUCTION It is well known that perception of transitory effects is quite dependent on an observer’s location. The perception of an earthquake depends on whether the observer is located on a lower or upper floor within a building. Inside a building, all other things being equal, there are some specific factors that increase the perception of macroseismic effects. Macroseismic scales propose only a qualitative approximate description of the varying effects felt at lower or upper floors. For example, the Mercalli-Cancani-Sieberg (MCS) (Sieberg 1930) and the Modified Mercalli Intensity (MMI) (Wood and Neumann 1931) scales describe the second degree as “Felt only by a few people, extremely susceptible, in perfectly quiet situations, almost always on the upper floors of buildings.” The European Macroseismic Scale (EMS) (Grünthal 1998) describes the seventh degree as “Many find it difficult to stand, especially on upper floors.” Moreover, the recommended practice is “to discount all reports from observers higher than the fifth floor when assigning intensity” (Grünthal 1998). These descriptions highlight the influence of upper floors, which are expected to enhance the effects of an earthquake compared with the lower floors, and consequently recommend the exclusion of data coming from upper floors. Another effect reported in literature is the different behavior of buildings depending on the structure height in relation to the frequency content of the seismic wave (Drimmel 1984; Kanai 1957; Celebi 2000; Balendra et al. 2002). To analyze the role of observation floor and building height on earthquake perception and to quantify these effects, we analyzed over 36,000 macroseismic questionnaires collected in Italy that reported transitory effects. Unlike research by other authors dealing with skyscraper structures in...
    Print ISSN: 0895-0695
    Electronic ISSN: 1938-2057
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2012-04-01
    Description: We propose a site-classification scheme based on the predominant period of the site, as determined from the average horizontal-to-vertical (H/V) spectral ratios of ground motion. Our scheme extends Zhao et al. (2006) classifications by adding two classes, the most important of which is defined by flat H/V ratios with amplitudes less than 2. The proposed classification is investigated by using 5%-damped response spectra from Italian earthquake records. We select a dataset of 602 three-component analog and digital recordings from 120 earthquakes recorded at 214 seismic stations within a hypocentral distance of 200 km. Selected events are in the moment-magnitude range 4.0=Mw=6.8 and focal depths from a few kilometers to 46 km. We computed H/V ratios for these data and used them to classify each site into one of six classes. We then investigate the impact of this classification scheme on empirical ground-motion prediction equations (GMPEs) by comparing its performance with that of the conventional rock/soil classification. Although the adopted approach results in only a small reduction of the overall standard deviation, the use of H/V spectral ratios in site classification does capture the signature of sites with flat frequency-response, as well as deep and shallow-soil profiles, characterized by long- and short-period resonance, respectively; in addition, the classification scheme is relatively quick and inexpensive, which is an advantage over schemes based on measurements of shear-wave velocity.Online Material: Tables of parameters defining the ground motion prediction equations, and figures of H/V spectral ratios, intraevent residuals, and spectral amplitudes.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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