Litcius/Paper detail

What Is Fling Step? Its Theory, Simulation Method, and Applications to Strong Ground Motion near Surface Fault Ruptures

Yoshiaki HISADA, Shinya TANAKA

2021Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America24 citationsDOI

Abstract

ABSTRACT We present the theory of the fling step and a theoretical method for simulating accurately the near-fault strong motions, and apply it to reproduce various strong-motion records near surface faults. Theoretically, the fling step is the contribution of the static Green’s function in the representation theorem (Hisada and Bielak, 2003), and we show that this theory holds for any seismic velocity structure. We first demonstrate the validity of this theory using theoretical solutions of a circular fault model in a homogeneous full-space. Next, we apply the theory to layered half-spaces, present a theoretical method based on the wavenumber integration method, and introduce various techniques to simulate the near-fault ground motions including fling steps with high accuracy. Finally, we demonstrate the effectiveness of the method by reproducing various strong-motion records near surface fault ruptures and discuss the characteristics of near-fault strong motions including the fling step and the forward directivity pulse. We made all of the software and data used in this article available on the internet.

Topics & Concepts

Fault (geology)Motion (physics)Surface (topology)Ground motionDirectivityRepresentation (politics)Computer scienceGeologyStructural engineeringGeometryPhysicsSeismologyClassical mechanicsMathematicsEngineeringTelecommunicationsLawAntenna (radio)PoliticsPolitical scienceSeismic Waves and AnalysisSeismic Performance and Analysisearthquake and tectonic studies