February 1, 2021
Journal Article

Resonant frequency derived from the Rayleigh-wave dispersion image: the high impedance boundary problem

Abstract

We present a simple and automated approach to estimate primary site response resonance, layer thickness, and shear wave velocity directly from a dispersion image for a layer over half-space problem. We demonstrate this for high impedance boundary conditions that lie in the upper tens of meters. Our approach eliminates the need for time-consuming dispersion curve picking and one-dimensional shear-wave velocity inversion for large data volumes that can capture velocity structure in profile. We highlight important relationships between dispersion characteristics and resonance parameters through synthetic modeling and field data acquired over Atlantic Coastal Plain sediments. In this environment, shallow soil conditions are critical to accurately estimate earthquake site response. We suggest that this image processing approach can be applied to a range of high impedance conditions at a range of scales, or can provide model constraints for more complex velocity structures.

Revised: February 25, 2021 | Published: February 1, 2021

Citation

Liberty L.M., J.T. St. Clair, T. Mikesell, and W.D. Schermerhorn. 2021. Resonant frequency derived from the Rayleigh-wave dispersion image: the high impedance boundary problem. Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America 111, no. 1:77–86. PNNL-SA-157148. doi:10.1785/0120200230