Abstract:
The majority of injuries and casualties during earthquakes occur as a result of partial or complete
collapse of buildings. The assessment of possible seismic ground motions for the purposes
of earthquake-resistant design can be performed by following the deterministic or probabilistic
methodology.
Chapter 1 presents an overview of the current practice in seismic hazard analysis with emphasis
on PSHA. At present, the Cornell-McGuire method prevails in PSHA studies. Despite significant
development and modifications, this method has several controversial aspects. Absence of
an upper bound of the seismic hazard curve is one of the most disputable aspects of the method,
as it leads to unrealistic ground motion estimates for very low probabilities of exceedance. This
problem stems from using the unbounded log-normal distribution in the modelling of the ground
motion variability.
The main objective of the study was to investigate this variability and suggest a more realistic
probability distribution which would allow accounting for the finiteness of the ground motion
induced by earthquake. Chapter 2 introduces the procedure that is suitable for studying the ground
motion variability. Given the data sample, this procedure allows selecting the most plausible
probability distribution from a set of candidate models. Chapter 3 demonstrates the application
of this procedure to PGA data recorded in Japan. This analysis demonstrated the superiority of
the GEVD in the vast majority of considered examples. Estimates of the shape parameter of
the GEVD were negative in every considered example, indicating the presence of a finite upper
bound of PGA. Therefore, the GEVD provides a model that is more realistic for the scatter of the
logarithm of PGA, and the application of this model leads to a bounded seismic hazard curve.
In connection with a revival of interest in seismic intensity as an analogue for physical ground
motion parameters, the problem of accounting for anisotropy in the attenuation of MMI is considered
in Chapter 4. A set of four equations that could account for this anisotropy was proposed
and the applicability of these equations was demonstrated by modelling the isoseismal maps of
two well-recorded seismic events that have occurred in South Africa. The results demonstrated
that, in general, the new equations were superior to the isotropic attenuation equation, especially
as regards to the pronounced anisotropy.
As several different PSHA methods exist, it is important to know how the results of application
of these methods corresponded to each other. Chapter 5 presents the comparative study
of three major PSHA methods, namely, the Cornell-McGuire method, the Parametric-Historic
method, and the method based on Monte Carlo simulations. Two regions in Russia were selected
for comparison, and the PGA estimates were compared for return periods of 475 and 2475 years.
The results indicated that the choice of a particular method for conducting PSHA has relatively little
effect on the hazard estimates when the same seismic source model was used in the calculations.
The considered PSHA methods would provide closely related results for areas of moderate seismic
activity; however, the difference among the results would apparently increase with increasing
seismic activity.