Difference between revisions of "CME Meeting 2011"

From SCECpedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 61: Line 61:
 
*[http://hypocenter.usc.edu/research/CME_Meetings/Song_SCEC11_Poster_Final.pdf AWP-ODC-SGT] (1Mb) - Shiyu Song et al
 
*[http://hypocenter.usc.edu/research/CME_Meetings/Song_SCEC11_Poster_Final.pdf AWP-ODC-SGT] (1Mb) - Shiyu Song et al
 
*[http://hypocenter.usc.edu/research/CME_Meetings/Zhou_SCEC2011_Poster.pdf AWP-ODC-GPU] (1Mb) - Jun Zhou et al
 
*[http://hypocenter.usc.edu/research/CME_Meetings/Zhou_SCEC2011_Poster.pdf AWP-ODC-GPU] (1Mb) - Jun Zhou et al
 
+
*[http://hypocenter.usc.edu/research/CME_Meetings/Isbiliroglu_SCEC_2011_Final.pdf Ground Motion and Building Motion Interactions] (1Mb) - Yigit Isbiliroglu et al
 +
*[http://hypocenter.usc.edu/research/CME_Meetings/Karaoglu_SCEC_2011 2Hz Northridge Simulation with Finite Elements] (1Mb) - Haydar Karaoglu et al
 +
*
 
== CME Research Accomplishsments 2010-2011 ==
 
== CME Research Accomplishsments 2010-2011 ==
 
SCEC CME special project summarizes its research accomplishments for the 2011 SCEC annual meeting.
 
SCEC CME special project summarizes its research accomplishments for the 2011 SCEC annual meeting.

Revision as of 15:54, 19 October 2011

SCEC/CME Computational Science Planning Meeting 2011

Fig 0: Simulated Annealing results.(Image Credit: Kevin Milner (SCEC/USC), Morgan Page)
  • Organizers: T. H. Jordan, P. Maechling
  • Date: Sunday, September 11, 2011 (1:00pm – 3:30pm)
  • Location: Hilton Palm Springs Resort, Palm Springs, CA
  • Address: 400 East Tahquitz Canyon Way, Palm Springs, CA,92262-6605
  • Room: Oasis Room III (3rd Floor)
Fig 1: Goodness of Fit comparing peak ground acceleration from 10hz seismograms produced by the Broadband Platform v11.2 against PGA observations from the Northridge earthquake, using a map-based Mayhew-Olsen GOF PGA scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).(Image Credit: Sandarsh Kumar (USC), Scott Callaghan (USC), Kim Olsen (SDSC)

SCEC/CME Meeting Agenda Sept 11, 2011

Fig 2: SCEC Broadband CyberShake PSHA hazard calculations produce PSHA hazard curves at frequencies up to 10Hz by combining 0.5Hz deterministic waveform-based UCERF2.0 hazard curves with stochastic high frequencies from the SCEC Broadband Platform v11.2.0. The resulting PSHA hazard curves provide peak ground motion estimates at frequencies and time-scales needed to validate PSHA hazard curves using precariously balanced rocks and other fragile geological structures. (Image Credit: Scott Callaghan (USC), Robert Graves, Kim Olsen (SDSU), Gaurang Mehta (USC/ISI)

Meeting Format: Researchers and research groups present their current and planned calculations with a two slide limit and a strict 10 minute limit including presentation and discussion.

Session One: 1:00pm - 2:20pm Current Computational Projects

  1. Ma-FE on Cobalt - Shuo Ma
  2. SORD at TACC and ALCF - Geoff Ely
  3. Hanging Wall Problem for NGA-W - Sandarsh Kumar
  4. Parallel Broadband - Mats Rynge
  5. Short-period EQ simulation, Vs_min effects, and DRM in Hercules - Jacobo Bielak
  6. California SI Inversion - En-Jui Lee
  7. Broadband CyberShake - Scott Callaghan
  8. AWP-ODC-SGT and AWP-ODC-GPU - Jun Zhou
  9. UCERF3 "Grand" Inversion: A Distributed Simulated Annealing Approach - Kevin Milner
  10. California Velocity Model Development - Carl Tape

Session Two: 2:30pm - 3:30pm: Future Computational Projects

  1. Earthquake Simulators - James H. Dieterich
  2. Dynamic Rupture Modeling - Jeremy Kozdon
  3. UCVM Development - Brad Aagaard
  4. Impact of small-scale CVM heterogeneity on Ground Motion Sims - Kim Olsen
  5. CyberShake 3.0 Map - Philip Maechling
  6. DOE and other Computational Science Research Proposals - Yifeng Cui
  7. NSF Earth Cube - Eva Zanzerkia
  8. NSF Geoinformatics - SCEC Science Planning
Fig 3: S-wave velocity at 0m depth produced using the SCEC Unified California Velocity Model Framework (UCVM) software combining 4 velocity models including CVM-H 11.2, USGS Central California, Lin Thurber State Wide, and Hadley-Kanamori 1D background model.(Image Credit: Patrick Small (USC), Brad Aagaard, John Shaw (Harvard), Andreas Plesch (Harvard)
Fig 4: Twenty one seconds after origin time for the SCEC M8 simulation showing instantaneous velocity magnitude as exaggerated topography. Image shows formation of a Mach cone at the leading of the M8 rupture as it progresses south at supershear velocity on Southern San Andreas Fault. (Image Credit: Amit Chourasia (SDSC), Yifeng Cui (SDSC), Kim Olsen (SDSU)

CME-related 2011 Meeting Posters

CME Research Accomplishsments 2010-2011

SCEC CME special project summarizes its research accomplishments for the 2011 SCEC annual meeting.

CME-related Web Sites