Seismic hazard site assessment in Kitimat, British Columbia, via bernstein-polynomial-based inversion of surface-wave dispersion​

This thesis applies a fully nonlinear Bayesian inversion methodology to estimate shear-wave velocity (Vs) profiles and uncertainties from surface-wave dispersion data extracted from ambient seismic noise. In the inversion, the Vs profile is parameterized using a Bernstein polynomial basis, which eff...

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Main Author: Gosselin, Jeremy M.
Other Authors: Dosso, Stan
Language:English
en
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7676
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-76762016-12-22T17:02:40Z Seismic hazard site assessment in Kitimat, British Columbia, via bernstein-polynomial-based inversion of surface-wave dispersion​ Gosselin, Jeremy M. Dosso, Stan Cassidy, John Seismic Hazard Inverse Problems Passive Seismic Surface Waves This thesis applies a fully nonlinear Bayesian inversion methodology to estimate shear-wave velocity (Vs) profiles and uncertainties from surface-wave dispersion data extracted from ambient seismic noise. In the inversion, the Vs profile is parameterized using a Bernstein polynomial basis, which efficiently characterizes general depth-dependent gradients in the soil/sediment column. Bernstein polynomials provide a stable parameterization in that small perturbations to the model parameters (basis-function coefficients) result in only small perturbations to the Vs profile. The inversion solution is defined in terms of the marginal posterior probability for Vs as a function of depth, estimated using Metropolis-Hastings sampling with parallel tempering. This methodology is validated via inversion of synthetic dispersion data as well as previously-considered data inverted using different parameterizations. The approach considered here is better suited than layered modelling approaches in applications where smooth gradients in geophysical parameters are expected, and/or the observed data are diffuse and not sensitive to fine-scale discrete layering (such as surface-wave dispersion). The Bernstein polynomial representation is much more general than other gradient-based models such that the form of the gradients are determined by the data, rather than by subjective parameterization choice. The Bernstein inversion methodology is also applied to dispersion data processed from passive array recordings collected in the coastal community of Kitimat, British Columbia. The region is the proposed site of several large-scale industrial development projects and has great economic and environmental significance for Canada. The inversion results are consistent with findings from other geophysical studies in the region and are used in a site-specific seismic hazard analysis. The level of ground-motion amplification expected to occur during an earthquake due to near-surface Vs structure is probabilistically quantified, and predicted to be significant compared to reference (hard ground) sites. Graduate 2016-12-20T21:41:10Z 2016-12-20T21:41:10Z 2016 2016-12-20 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7676 English en Available to the World Wide Web
collection NDLTD
language English
en
sources NDLTD
topic Seismic Hazard
Inverse Problems
Passive Seismic
Surface Waves
spellingShingle Seismic Hazard
Inverse Problems
Passive Seismic
Surface Waves
Gosselin, Jeremy M.
Seismic hazard site assessment in Kitimat, British Columbia, via bernstein-polynomial-based inversion of surface-wave dispersion​
description This thesis applies a fully nonlinear Bayesian inversion methodology to estimate shear-wave velocity (Vs) profiles and uncertainties from surface-wave dispersion data extracted from ambient seismic noise. In the inversion, the Vs profile is parameterized using a Bernstein polynomial basis, which efficiently characterizes general depth-dependent gradients in the soil/sediment column. Bernstein polynomials provide a stable parameterization in that small perturbations to the model parameters (basis-function coefficients) result in only small perturbations to the Vs profile. The inversion solution is defined in terms of the marginal posterior probability for Vs as a function of depth, estimated using Metropolis-Hastings sampling with parallel tempering. This methodology is validated via inversion of synthetic dispersion data as well as previously-considered data inverted using different parameterizations. The approach considered here is better suited than layered modelling approaches in applications where smooth gradients in geophysical parameters are expected, and/or the observed data are diffuse and not sensitive to fine-scale discrete layering (such as surface-wave dispersion). The Bernstein polynomial representation is much more general than other gradient-based models such that the form of the gradients are determined by the data, rather than by subjective parameterization choice. The Bernstein inversion methodology is also applied to dispersion data processed from passive array recordings collected in the coastal community of Kitimat, British Columbia. The region is the proposed site of several large-scale industrial development projects and has great economic and environmental significance for Canada. The inversion results are consistent with findings from other geophysical studies in the region and are used in a site-specific seismic hazard analysis. The level of ground-motion amplification expected to occur during an earthquake due to near-surface Vs structure is probabilistically quantified, and predicted to be significant compared to reference (hard ground) sites. === Graduate
author2 Dosso, Stan
author_facet Dosso, Stan
Gosselin, Jeremy M.
author Gosselin, Jeremy M.
author_sort Gosselin, Jeremy M.
title Seismic hazard site assessment in Kitimat, British Columbia, via bernstein-polynomial-based inversion of surface-wave dispersion​
title_short Seismic hazard site assessment in Kitimat, British Columbia, via bernstein-polynomial-based inversion of surface-wave dispersion​
title_full Seismic hazard site assessment in Kitimat, British Columbia, via bernstein-polynomial-based inversion of surface-wave dispersion​
title_fullStr Seismic hazard site assessment in Kitimat, British Columbia, via bernstein-polynomial-based inversion of surface-wave dispersion​
title_full_unstemmed Seismic hazard site assessment in Kitimat, British Columbia, via bernstein-polynomial-based inversion of surface-wave dispersion​
title_sort seismic hazard site assessment in kitimat, british columbia, via bernstein-polynomial-based inversion of surface-wave dispersion​
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7676
work_keys_str_mv AT gosselinjeremym seismichazardsiteassessmentinkitimatbritishcolumbiaviabernsteinpolynomialbasedinversionofsurfacewavedispersion
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