This chapter reviews seismology and site effects to provide background for understanding ground motion characteristics and their influence on the behavior of structures. It discusses earthquake sources, magnitude, and magnitude-recurrence relationships. The chapter also discusses the propagation of ground motion to a site, near-source effects, site amplification, and shaking intensity and its representation using response spectra. Seismology is the field of science that studies earthquakes and the propagation of waves through the earth. A number of signal processing techniques are applied to remove noise and sensor artifacts in order to generate the processed acceleration time histories. Because high-frequency waves attenuate faster with distance, most such far-field recordings will have a lower amplitude vertical component. Duration is a scalar measure of interest, especially when discussing the behavior of cyclically degrading structures.
María Elisa Ramos-Sepúlveda, Jonathan P. Stewart, Grace A. Parker, Morgan P. Moschetti, Eric M Thompson, Scott J. Brandenberg, Youssef M. A. Hashash, Ellen M. Rathje
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