Broadband Platform 13.9.0
The SCEC Broadband Platform is a software system which generates 0-100 Hz seismograms for historical and scenario earthquakes in California and Japan.
Contents
- 1 Overview
- 2 Current Release
- 3 Dependencies
- 4 Documentation
- 5 Downloads
- 6 Current Broadband Platform Release
- 7 Optional Broadband Platform Patches
- 8 Previous Broadband Platform Release
- 9 Supporting Materials
- 10 Development version
- 11 Help
- 12 License
- 13 Changes in Broadband Platform v11.2.3
- 14 Collaborators
- 15 Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
- 16 See Also
- 17 References
Overview
The goal of the SCEC Broadband Simulation Platform is to generate broadband (0-100 Hz) ground motions for earthquakes. The SCEC Broadband Platform is a collaborative software development project involving SCEC researchers, research engineers, graduate students, and the SCEC/CME software development group. SCEC scientific groups have contributed modules to the Broadband Platform including rupture generation, low- and high-frequency seismogram synthesis, non-linear site effects, and visualization. These complex scientific codes have been integrated into a system that supports easy on-demand computation of broadband seismograms. The SCEC Broadband Platform is designed to be used by both scientific and engineering researchers with some experience interpreting ground motion simulations.
Users may calculate broadband seismograms for both historical earthquakes (validation events including Northridge and Loma Prieta) and user-defined earthquakes. The platform produces a variety of data products, including broadband seismograms, rupture visualizations, and several goodness-of-fit plots. Users can install the platform on their own machine, verify that it is installed correctly, and run their own simulations on demand without requiring knowledge of any of the code involved. Users may run a validation event, supply their own simple source description, or provide a rupture description in SRF format. Users may specify their own list of stations or use a provided list. Currently the platform supports stations and events in Southern California, the Bay Area, the Mojave Desert, Central and Western Japan. Users may select among various method that include rupture generation, low-frequency synthesis, high-frequency synthesis, and incorporation of site effects, with the option of running a goodness-of-fit comparison against observed or simulated seismograms. These codes have been validated against recorded ground motions from real events.
The Broadband Platform was implemented using software development best practices, including version control, user documentation, acceptance tests, and formal releases, with the aim of ease of installation and use.
Current Release
The current official release of Broadband Platform is v13.9.0. This distribution was posted online on Thursday, 12 September 2013. This is a new version of the platform that includes a large number of new capabilities. It is the first major release of the Broadband Platform since version 11.2.3, released in May 2012. Details of the new features along with several bugs fixes are provided in the release notes and the "changes" section below. New, and old Broadband platform users should work with this version of the software, and we recommend current Broadband platform users migrate to this new version whenever possible.
Dependencies
Broadband has the following dependencies:
A non-commercial copy of Intel c and FORTRAN compilers can be obtained by registering for a non-commercial account with Intel and downloading the compilers from the Intel website.
Documentation
User Guide Wiki (includes installation instructions):
Downloads
To install and use the Broadband platform, you need the source code, one or more Green's Functions packages, and optionally one or more Validation packages. The Broadband Platform contains cumulative improvements to the geoscientific codes and software infrastructure. We recommend use of the most recent version of the Broadband Platform, unless you are trying to reproduce results generated with an earlier version of the platform.
Users that are upgrading from previous version of the Broadband Platform will need to retrieve new versions of all the Broadband Platform packages as there have been significant changes in all the packages since the previous 11.2.3 release.
There are detailed installation instructions in the Broadband User Guide 13.9.0.
Detailed instructions to setup the Broadband Platform as a local installation on a Linux Machine are provided in the Broadband User Guide 13.9.0. Briefly, they can be summarized in the following steps:
- The software can be installed in an account on a Linux computer with at least 10GB of disk storage and C, Fortran, and Python software installed.
- From this Linux computer, start a web browser and point to this download page. Alternatively, you can download the files to a different machine and use FTP or SFTP to copy them over.
- Download each file into a directory and run the md5sum program to confirm you have an undamaged version of the distribution files by comparing the md5sum provided below against the one calculated at the local Linux computer.
- Uncompress the distribution (tar.gz) files into the proper directory structure as described in the Broadband User Guide 13.9.0.
- Build the executables by running the top level makefile.
- Configure your environment by adding a few Broadband Platform variables to your shell's environment.
- Confirm the code is built correctly by running UnitTests.
- Confirm the code runs correctly on your system by running AcceptanceTests.
- Use the platform for research purposes.
Current Broadband Platform Release
The current SCEC Broadband platform release is v13.9.0. Links to the source distribution and Green's Functions and Validation packages are listed in the table below:
Version | Release Date | Files | User Guide | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Source Code | Data | |||
11.2.3 | 05/09/2012 | bbp_dist_v11.2.3.tgz | bbp_data_v11.2.3.tgz | Broadband User Guide v11.2.3 |
Optional Broadband Platform Patches
There are currently no optional patches available for 13.9.0.
Previous Broadband Platform Release
Earlier version of the broadband platform software and data distributions are provided to support existing Broadband platform users. However, we recommend all users upgrade to the most recent version at first opportunity.
Version | Release Date | Files | User Guide | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Source Code | Data | Patches | |||
11.2.3 | 5/09/2012 | bbp_dist_v11.2.3.tgz | bbp_data_v11.2.3.tgz | Broadband User Guide v11.2.3 | |
11.2.2 | 10/21/2011 | bbp_dist_v11.2.2.tgz | bbp_data_v11.2.2.tgz | bbp_patch_v11.2.2.1.tgz | Broadband User Guide v11.2.2 |
11.2.1 | 09/29/2011 | bbp_dist_v11.2.1.tgz | bbp_data_v11.2.1.tgz | Broadband User Guide v11.2.1 | |
11.2.0 | 02/18/2011 | bbp_dist_v11.2.0.tgz | bbp_data_v11.2.0.tgz | Broadband User Guide v11.2 |
Supporting Materials
- Broadband Platform Presentation - SSA 2011 - Robert Graves (5MB pptx file)
- Broadband poster from AGU 2010 (PDF, 882 KB)
- Broadband overview talk from SC10 (PPT, 3.7 MB)
- Technical diagrams of Broadband module relationships (PPTX, 16 KB)
Development version
If you're interested in working with the latest development version of the platform, you can check it out from
svn co https://source.usc.edu/svn/broadband/trunk
Details about working with the development version are provided in the User Guide.
The next version of Broadband is expected to be released in Q4 of 2013.
Help
For assistance with the Broadband Platform, you may
- Email software @ scec.org with specific questions
- Browse and submit new trouble tickets, or feature requests, at Broadband Trac site. SCEC user login is required to submit trouble tickets this way.
License
SCEC Broadband Platform software distributions are released under an Apache 2.0 open-source license as described here Broadband License.
Changes in Broadband Platform v11.2.3
Broadband Platform v11.2.3, released in May 2012 is considered a 'bug-fix' release of Broadband Platform. Broadband Platform v11.2.3 contains the same functional capabilities as v11.2.2 with the following modifications.
- Trac # 30 Change tolerance depending on acceptance test combo
- Trac # 69 UCSB high and low frequency modules don't work for Loma Prieta validation
- Trac # 70 UCSB src/ucsb/Converter/utlFault.h srf name buffer length too short
- Trac # 71 Allow tolerance checks to be disabled in unit/acceptance tests
- Trac # 72 run_bbp_2G.py option file parsing exception when selecting a file among two or more choices
- Trac # 74 Minor bug in a routine that is used for geographic conversions in the URS simulations on the BB platform
- Trac # 75 Update Green's function data file with fixes and new datasets
- Trac # 76 Change DEFAULT_KAPPA from 0.02 to 0.01 in ./comps/stas2files.py
- Trac # 77 Remove station "olem" vs30 value from from UCSB Loma Prieta stations.vs30 in 11.7.0/trunk data sets
- Trac # 78 Updated geobb_srf.py to use URS ll2xy coordinate conversion routines on trunk
Broadband Platform v11.2.2, released in October 2011 is considered a 'bug-fix' release of Broadband Platform. Broadband Platform v11.2.2 contains the same functional capabilities as v11.2.1 with the following modifications.
- Trac # 56 Convert BBP Matlab scripts to Python
- Trac # 67 Rename the cleanup.py so that people do not run it accidentally
- Trac # 68 Build Broadband with latest (2011) Intel and GNU compilers
11.2.1 - September 2011 - Bug-fix release List of Trac items fixed in this release:
- Trac # 41 - Add License file (EULA) to Broadband distribution.
- Trac # 42 - Add a file manifest to the distribution archives.
- Trac # 46 - Remove Hardcoded Green_Bank.inf entries.
- Trac # 47 - Syn1d Module fails with IO error due to missing file.
- Trac # 54 - plot_SRF.csh fails with "Newline in variable name".
- Trac # 61 - Provide an option to remove temporary folders at end of Broadband simulation run.
- Trac # 62 - Add a warning and user prompt to comps/cleanup.py script.
- Trac # 63 - Acceptance resume.txt should not be created in ref_data/accept_inputs.
- Trac # 64 - Simulations with URS HF module fail with IOError and segmentation faults.
- Trac # 65 - Add the XML file generated during a Broadband simulation to the output directory as metadata.
11.2.0 - February 2011 - Initial release.
Collaborators
- ETH Zurich - Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich
- San Diego State University Dept of Geological Sciences
- U.C. Santa Barbara Dept of Earth Sciences
- UCSB Institute for Crustal Studies
- URS Corporation
- SCEC
- SCEC/CME Project
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
We post BBP user questions and our response to a Broadband Platform Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) page:
See Also
- Broadband Platform 2007
- SCEC Software Downloads
- SCEC Wiki Main
- SCEC Home Page
- Broadband User Guide Current
- Broadband User Guide Development
- Broadband Server
- Broadband Hanging Wall Simulation
- Broadband Development
- Broadband Platform Installation Guide Current
- Broadband Platform User Guide Current
References
- Graves, R. W. and A. Pitarka (2010). “Broadband Ground-Motion Simulation Using a Hybrid Approach.” Bull. Seis. Soc. Am., 100(5A), pp. 2095-2123, doi: 10.1785/0120100057. link
- Mai, P.M., W. Imperatori, and K.B. Olsen (2010). “Hybrid broadband ground motion simulations: combining long-period deterministic synthetics with high frequency multiple S-to-S back-scattering.” Bull. Seis. Soc. Am., 100(5A), pp. 2124-2142, doi: 10.1785/0120080194. link
- Schmedes, J., R. J. Archuleta, and D. Lavallée (2010). “Correlation of earthquake source parameters inferred from dynamic rupture simulations.” J. Geophys. Res., 115, B03304, doi:10.1029/2009JB006689. link