Difference between revisions of "CyberShake Study 2.3"

From SCECpedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
(Redirected page to CyberShake Study 13.4)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
#redirect [[CyberShake Study 13.4]]
 
CyberShake Study 2.3 is a proposed study to calculate hazard curves under [[CyberShake 1.5]] using CVM-S and CVM-H with the RWG V3.0.3 SGT code and AWP-ODC-SGT, and the Graves and Pitarka (2010) rupture variations. The goal is to calculate the same Southern California site list (286 sites) as for past CyberShake studies so we can produce comparison curves and maps, and understand the impact of the SGT codes and velocity models on the CyberShake seismic hazard.
 
CyberShake Study 2.3 is a proposed study to calculate hazard curves under [[CyberShake 1.5]] using CVM-S and CVM-H with the RWG V3.0.3 SGT code and AWP-ODC-SGT, and the Graves and Pitarka (2010) rupture variations. The goal is to calculate the same Southern California site list (286 sites) as for past CyberShake studies so we can produce comparison curves and maps, and understand the impact of the SGT codes and velocity models on the CyberShake seismic hazard.
 +
 +
*[[CyberShake Study 13.4]]
  
 
== Proposed sites ==
 
== Proposed sites ==
Line 127: Line 130:
 
== Papers and Presentations ==
 
== Papers and Presentations ==
  
[[File:Study_2.3_Readiness_Review.ppt]]
+
[http://hypocenter.usc.edu/research/cybershake/Study_13_4_Science_Readiness_Review.pptx Science Readiness Review]
 +
 
 +
[http://hypocenter.usc.edu/research/cybershake/Study_13_4_Technical_Readiness_Review.pptx Technical Readiness Review]
  
 
== Related Entries ==
 
== Related Entries ==
 
*[[Geoinformatics Project]]
 
*[[Geoinformatics Project]]
 
*[[SEISM Project]]
 
*[[SEISM Project]]

Latest revision as of 00:32, 11 April 2013

CyberShake Study 2.3 is a proposed study to calculate hazard curves under CyberShake 1.5 using CVM-S and CVM-H with the RWG V3.0.3 SGT code and AWP-ODC-SGT, and the Graves and Pitarka (2010) rupture variations. The goal is to calculate the same Southern California site list (286 sites) as for past CyberShake studies so we can produce comparison curves and maps, and understand the impact of the SGT codes and velocity models on the CyberShake seismic hazard.

Proposed sites

We are proposing to run 286 sites around Southern California. Those sites include 46 points of interest, 27 precarious rock sites, 23 broadband station locations, 43 20 km gridded sites, and 147 10 km gridded sites. All of them fall within the Southern California box except for Diablo Canyon and Pioneer Town. You can get a CSV file listing the sites here. A KML file listing the sites is available here.

Fig 1: Sites selected for Study 2.3 Purple are gridded sites, red are precarious rocks, orange are SCSN stations, and yellow are sites of interest.

Computational and Data Estimates

We are planning to use Blue Waters, Stampede, and Kraken for this calculation. We plan to calculate 286 sets of 2-component SGTs for each of RWG CVM-S, RWG CVM-H, AWP CVM-S, AWP CVM-H for a total of 1144 sets of SGTs.

We estimate the following requirements for each system. Data estimates are for generated data we may want to keep (SGTs, seismograms, PSA).

Blue Waters

Use for SGT calculations

572 sets of AWP SGTs x 5000 SUs/set = 2.9M SUs
572 sets of RWG SGTs x 5500 SUs/set = 3.2M SUs
Total:  6.1M SUs
1144 sets of SGTs x 40 GB/set = 44.7 TB

Stampede

Use for RWG post-processing and half of AWP

858 sites x 900 SUs/site = 850k SUs
858 sites x 11.6 GB/site = 9.7 TB output data (seismograms, spectral acceleration)

Kraken

Use for half of AWP post-processing

286 sites x 5500 SUs/site = 1.6M SUs
286 sites x 11.6 GB/site = 3.2 TB output data (seismograms, spectral acceleration)

SCEC storage

1144 sites x 11.6 GB/site = 13.0 TB stored output data
1144 sites x 4.9 GB/site = 5.5 TB workflow logs

Verification

Before beginning Study 2.3 production runs, we first generated hazard curves in all 4 conditions (RWG CVM-S, RWG CVM-H, AWP CVM-S, AWP CVM-H) for 4 test sites, WNGC, PAS, USC, and SBSM. Below are hazard curves comparing these results, along with the previous version of RWG (V3).

WNGC

3s 5s 10s
CVM-S
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
CVM-H
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)

PAS

3s 5s 10s
CVM-S
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
CVM-H
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)

USC

3s 5s 10s
CVM-S
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
CVM-H
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)

SBSM

The CVM-H curves are quite different for RWG V3.0.3 and RWG V3. This is because the V3 curves were made with CVM-H 11.2, whereas the RWG V3.0.3 (and AWP) curves were made with CVM-H 11.9. The update in CVM-H included the addition of the San Bernardino basin, which makes a big impact. You can see this on a velocity profile at SBSM:

SBSM velocity profile.png

3s 5s 10s
CVM-S
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
CVM-H
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)
RWG V3.0.3 (green), AWP (purple), RWG V3 (orange)

Papers and Presentations

Science Readiness Review

Technical Readiness Review

Related Entries