Difference between revisions of "UCVM Users Guide"

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=== Statewide Geotechnical Layer ===
 
=== Statewide Geotechnical Layer ===
  
A statewide GTL for the proposed coverage region is included within UCVM. This is based on the Vs30-derived GTL method developed by Ely (2010). Interpolation between this GTL and the underlying crustal models is accomplished with the interpolation method described in Ely (2010). The z range over which interpolation is performed is configurable, as is the interpolation method used. The Ely method takes its input Vs30 value from the Vs30 map included within UCVM (described in the previous section).
+
A statewide GTL for the proposed coverage region is included within UCVM. This is based on the Vs30-derived GTL method developed by Ely (2010). Interpolation between this GTL and the underlying crustal models is accomplished with the interpolation method described in that same publication. The z range over which interpolation is performed is configurable, as is the interpolation method used. The Ely method takes its input Vs30 value from the Vs30 map included within UCVM (described in the previous section).
  
 
Additionally, UCVM is able to support any number of other user-defined GTLs. It will combine them in a manner analogous to how the crustal models are combined. Each GTL may also have its own user-defined interpolation function that is used to blend it with the underlying crustal models. If no interpolation method is specified, linear interpolation is assumed.
 
Additionally, UCVM is able to support any number of other user-defined GTLs. It will combine them in a manner analogous to how the crustal models are combined. Each GTL may also have its own user-defined interpolation function that is used to blend it with the underlying crustal models. If no interpolation method is specified, linear interpolation is assumed.

Revision as of 18:32, 4 May 2011

Unified California Velocity Model (UCVM) is a proposed California state-wide 3D velocity model. One important use of UCVM is in high resolution 3D wave propagation simulations for California. UCVM development is an interdisciplinary research collaboration involving geoscientists and computer scientists. UCVM geoscience research includes identification and assembly of existing California velocity models into a state-wide model and improvements to existing velocity models. UCVM computer science research includes definition of a easy-to-use CVM query interface, integration of regional 3D and geotechnical models, and automated CVM evaluation processing capabilities.

Existing Model Coverage

UCVM is trying to move forward on a statewide seismic velocity model for CA suitable for ground-motion modeling. Current concept is that this model would not be a single model but a seamless combination of models covering various regions of the state. The tricky part of course is the transition from one model to another and the use of background models to fill in the gaps.

As a first step, we want to put together a map of the coverage:

Current Detailed Seismic Velocity Models

  1. SCEC CVM-4 CVM-S
  2. SCEC CVM-H CVM-H
  3. USGS Bay Area Model cencalvm
  4. Carl Tape's Great Central Valley Model
  5. Rob Graves' Cape Mendocino Region Model, Graves (1994)

Background Tomographic Models

  1. Moschetti Surface Wave Models
  2. Parkfield regional model, Thurber et al (2006)
  3. San Francisco area regional model, Thurber et al (2007)
  4. Northern California Regional 3D P-wave Velocity Model, Thurber et al (2009)
  5. Egill's regional southern CA model
  6. California Statewide 3D Velocity Model, Lin et al (2010). wiki: Lin Thurber CVM website: Guoqing Lin's website

Summary of Coverage Regions

Coverage regions of various California 3D velocity Models (Figure by Carl Tape )

Tape is working on a new socal mesh (black) of CVMH6.3 will cover somewhat west and north of the current CVMH model. This is the m16 model region from my thesis, which was based on an older CVMH model. Eventually it will contain the entire CVMH6.3 model, including to the south. All CVMH6.3 simulations are Vp, Vs, rho, with constant attenuation above the basement surface (in the basins). CVMH goes down a couple hundred kms, but the portion I use is upper 60 km, and the local earthquake inversion sensitivity is dominantly upper 25 km.

  • The yellow dashed line is the target simulation goal for San Joaquin and Sierra model and simulations. Andreas, John, and Carl have developed several surfaces within this region (including to the continental shelf), and we have lots of velocity data in the San Joaquin basin, which is our focus. (Andreas loaded the Lin-Thurber CA model as well.)
  • The red box is CVMH6.3
  • The inner red box as the high-res LA model.

Model List

SCEC CVM-S

This southern California model is described at CVM-S.

SCEC CVM-H

This southern California model is described at CVM-H.

USGS Bay Area (cencalvm)

This northern California model is described at cencalvm.

Northern California Regional 3D P-wave Velocity Model

Here is info on the first of four of our regional-scale 3D P-wave velocity models that I will provide. This is for our Northern California model, published in Thurber et al (2009).

Formally, the bounding rectangle is approximately given below however, the western edge realistically is the California coastline, and the northern edge is not quite to the Oregon border.

42.60, -122.32
40.34, -126.27
37.74, -117.88
35.62, -121.71
  • The bottom nodes of the model are at 36 km.
  • Node spacing is mostly 10 or 15 km in the NE-SW direction and is uniformly 20 km in the NW-SE direction. Actual model resolution based on checkerboard tests is nominally ~twice the node spacing.
  • Vp model provided.

Cape Mendocino Region Model

This manuscript describes some 3D modeling of the Eel River basin which is in the Cape Mendocino region at the northern end of the San Andreas. Rob Graves did this work as part of the development of the 3D FD methodology and published as a USGS external grant report in Graves (1994).

Parkfield Regional Model

Parkfield regional model, published in Thurber et al. (2006). Bounding box corners:

TOP:
35.918339 -121.412085
36.6838908 -120.320581

BOTTOM:
35.0996582 -120.542912
35.86521 -119.45284

The model is fully documented in the supplementary information for the paper Thurber et al (2006).

San Francisco Regional Model

A higher-resolution model for the San Francisco Bay area, published in Thurber et al (2007). It covers a smaller region than our northern California model so perhaps it is not useful.

Desired Model Features

There is a set of fundamental information necessary to include any new model into UCVM, regardless of delivery format (files, table in a paper ,etc.). If the new model is already packaged as a downloadable code set, there are a number of features that make it easier for it to be integrated into UCVM. These are listed below.

Fundamental Information

  • The map projection/datum used, and the (lon,lat) to (x,y) transformation
  • The bounding polygon for each models
  • The depth extent, and whether the model is query by depth/elevation/elev_offset
  • Brief description of the resolution
  • The physical properties it includes (i.e., density, Vp, Vs, Qp, Qs).

Packaging in Code

  • Provide both application programming interface and command-line query tool
  • Programming interface: C preferred, although C++/Fortran will work, with the following function defined:
    • Initialization function
    • Query model function
    • Get Version ID function
    • Finalizer (cleanup) function
  • GTL toggle: Allow toggling any GTL on/off in both API and command-line tool
  • Allow query by (lon, lat, depth), where depth is offset from free surface, positive down
  • Return Vp, Vs, density at a minimum
  • Model region has finite extents, outside of which the query function returns a "no data" indicator
  • Able to compile model with generic GNU compiler

Prototype UCVM API

A prototype API for a state-wide model has been developed and is described in this document: UCVM API.

Coverage Region and Projection

The following is a proposed coverage region and projection. The entire state of California is included, along with portions of Oregon, Nevada, Arizona, and northern Mexico.

Proposed coverage region for UCVM (cyan) overlayed upon regions of various California 3D velocity models (CVM-S: red, CVM-H: blue, LinThurber: yellow, Thurber NoCal: green, USGS Bay Area: white)
Origin: -129.25 DD, 41.0 DD
Projection: Azimuthal Equidistant (lon_0=-120.0, lat_0=36.0, x_0=0, y_0=0)
Rotation Angle: 55.0 D
Dimensions: 1800km x 800km

Statewide DEM

A statewide DEM for the proposed coverage region is included within UCVM. Elevation data has been sampled from USGS NED 1 arcsec dataset (~30 m), and bathymetric data from the NOAA ETOPO1 1' dataset (~1.5 km). For testing purposes, this DEM is currently sampled at a resolution of 1km but this resolution can be easily increased. The elevation at a particular point is smoothed using bilinear interpolation of the surrounding four elevation points.

Statewide Vs30 Map

A statewide Vs30 map for the proposed coverage region is included within UCVM. Vs30 data for the California landmass has been sampled from the Wills (2006) dataset at approx 0.0002197 D resolution, and out-of-state/ocean areas have been sampled from the Wald (2007) dataset at 0.0083333 D resolution. For testing purposes, this map is currently sampled at a resolution of 1km but this resolution can be easily increased. The Vs30 value at a particular point is smoothed using bilinear interpolation of the surrounding four map points.

Statewide Geotechnical Layer

A statewide GTL for the proposed coverage region is included within UCVM. This is based on the Vs30-derived GTL method developed by Ely (2010). Interpolation between this GTL and the underlying crustal models is accomplished with the interpolation method described in that same publication. The z range over which interpolation is performed is configurable, as is the interpolation method used. The Ely method takes its input Vs30 value from the Vs30 map included within UCVM (described in the previous section).

Additionally, UCVM is able to support any number of other user-defined GTLs. It will combine them in a manner analogous to how the crustal models are combined. Each GTL may also have its own user-defined interpolation function that is used to blend it with the underlying crustal models. If no interpolation method is specified, linear interpolation is assumed.

Combining Regional Models

The UCVM API currently combines models by simply tiling them in a user-specified order. If this method will continue to be used, then properly combining regional models into a statewide will require some smoothing/reconciliation of the overlaping regions. Smoothing will likely need to be performed manually on a case-by-case basis, to ensure that the best available data is for a particular region/basin is used. For example, we may need to produce a patch model that smooths the overlap between the CVM-S and USGS Bay Area models as shown below.

CenCal/CVM-S

A set of plots showing the interface betwen USGS CenCal and CVM-S from depths 0-20km can be downloaded here: tiling_cencal_cvms.tar

Fig 1: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 0km depth
Fig 2: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 1km depth
Fig 3: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 2km depth
Fig 4: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 3km depth
Fig 5: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 4km depth
Fig 6: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 5km depth
Fig 7: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 6km depth
Fig 8: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 7km depth
Fig 9: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 8km depth
Fig 10: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 9km depth
Fig 11: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 10km depth
Fig 12: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 11km depth
Fig 13: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 12km depth
Fig 14: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 13km depth
Fig 15: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 14km depth
Fig 16: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 15km depth
Fig 17: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 16km depth
Fig 3: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 17km depth
Fig 3: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 18km depth
Fig 3: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 19km depth
Fig 3: CenCal + CVM-S Vs 20km depth

Visualization Tool

A simple web service for generating plots from UCVM is available at UCVM Viz (SCEC login required).

Related Entries

See Also

References

  1. Ely, G., T. H. Jordan, P. Small, P. J. Maechling (2010), A Vs30-derived Near-surface Seismic Velocity Model Abstract S51A-1907, presented at 2010 Fall Meeting, AGU, San Francisco, Calif., 13-17 Dec. [Ely2010-AGU.pdf]
  2. Graves, R. (1994), Rupture History and Strong Motion Modeling of the 1992 Cape Mendocino Earthquake, USGS External Grant Report Cape mendocino-19941027.pdf
  3. Lin, G., C. H. Thurber, H. Zhang, E. Hauksson, P. Shearer, F. Waldhauser, T. M. Brocher, and J. Hardebeck (2010), A California statewide three-dimensional seismic velocity model from both absolute and differential Times, Bull. Seism. Soc. Am., 100, in press. supplemental
  4. Thurber, C., H. Zhang, F. Waldhauser, J. Hardebeck, A. Michael, and D. Eberhart-Phillips (2006), Three-dimensional compressional wavespeed model, earthquake relocations, and focal mechanisms for the Parkfield, California, region, Bull. Seism. Soc. Am., 96, S38-S49, 2006. supplemental
  5. Thurber, C., T. Brocher, H. Zhang, and V. Langenheim (2007), Three-dimensional P-wave velocity model for the San Francisco Bay region, California, J. Geophys. Res., 112, B07313, doi:10.1029/ 2006JB004682, 2007.
  6. Thurber, C., H. Zhang, T. Brocher, and V. Langenheim (2009), Regional three-dimensional seismic velocity model of the crust and uppermost mantle of northern California, J.Geophys. Res., 114, B01304, doi:10.1029/2008JB005766, 2009.
  7. Wald, D. J., and T. I. Allen (2007), Topographic slope as a proxy for seismic site conditions and amplification, Bull. Seism. Soc. Am., 97 (5), 1379-1395, doi:10.1785/0120060267.
  8. Wills, C. J., and K. B. Clahan (2006), Developing a map of geologically defined site-condition categories for California, Bull. Seism. Soc. Am., 96 (4A), 1483-1501, doi:10.1785/0120050179.