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Fault Slip Sensors and DamageMap: GPS in Rapid Earthquake Response Systems Ken Hudnut USGS, Pasadena
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Fault Slip Sensors and DamageMap: GPS in Rapid Earthquake Response Systems Ken Hudnut USGS, Pasadena.

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: Fault Slip Sensors and DamageMap: GPS in Rapid Earthquake Response Systems Ken Hudnut USGS, Pasadena.

Fault Slip Sensorsand DamageMap:

GPS in Rapid EarthquakeResponse Systems

Ken Hudnut

USGS, Pasadena

Page 2: Fault Slip Sensors and DamageMap: GPS in Rapid Earthquake Response Systems Ken Hudnut USGS, Pasadena.

San Andreas fault 35 mm/yr slip rate;

>70% of plate motion 1685, 1857 eq’s

SoCal is now well ‘wired’

Likely source of most future ‘Big Ones’

Fault physics experiment GPS/INS in near-field ALSM & DG scan ‘net’

Great place to test EEW

Build “zipper” arrays Cholame - Simmler Coachella Valley

Page 3: Fault Slip Sensors and DamageMap: GPS in Rapid Earthquake Response Systems Ken Hudnut USGS, Pasadena.
Page 4: Fault Slip Sensors and DamageMap: GPS in Rapid Earthquake Response Systems Ken Hudnut USGS, Pasadena.

Lone Juniper Ranch and Frazier Park High School

First prototype GPS fault slip sensor; up to 10 Hz (Hudnut et al., 2002)

Spans the San Andreas fault near Gorman, California

Page 5: Fault Slip Sensors and DamageMap: GPS in Rapid Earthquake Response Systems Ken Hudnut USGS, Pasadena.

San Andreas - place two betsboth ~120 km from Los Angeles (LA)

Coachella Valleysegment is ~60 kmto San Bernardino

Page 6: Fault Slip Sensors and DamageMap: GPS in Rapid Earthquake Response Systems Ken Hudnut USGS, Pasadena.

San Andreas - instrument majorlifeline infrastructure crossings

Page 7: Fault Slip Sensors and DamageMap: GPS in Rapid Earthquake Response Systems Ken Hudnut USGS, Pasadena.

•Satellite

•Telemetry

•Internet

SENSOR PACKAGE

-Accelerometer-Tiltmeter-GPS sensor

REAL-TIME DAMAGE ASSESSMENT

Courtesy ofErdal Safak (USGS)

Page 8: Fault Slip Sensors and DamageMap: GPS in Rapid Earthquake Response Systems Ken Hudnut USGS, Pasadena.

Factor Building at UCLAPrototype for DamageMap

PI’s Erdal Safak, Monical Kohler and Paul Davis

Page 9: Fault Slip Sensors and DamageMap: GPS in Rapid Earthquake Response Systems Ken Hudnut USGS, Pasadena.

Another technological advancefor rapid earthquake

information message delivery

Cell phones with GPS open possibility of ‘smart’ SMS real-time warning targeted to at-risk mobile users (outdoors) or mobile platforms (e.g., while in their cars)

[currently not feasible due to power requirements, if GPS is on all the time]

Maps2MEFutureRoads

Page 10: Fault Slip Sensors and DamageMap: GPS in Rapid Earthquake Response Systems Ken Hudnut USGS, Pasadena.

Summary Slip sensor concept is to augment regional seismic coverage - one part of an

overall EEW system that is primarily using a very different approach

Measure slip directly - don’t need to know anything else - ‘quick & easy’

High risk deployment strategy tuned to rare pay-off in extreme events

Robust earthquake early warning system design obtain more accurate displacement observations new instrumentation for dynamic and static displacement address

deficiencies due to double-integration of accelerometer records

Same R&D effort as for DamageMap instrumentation - now under way with USGS Venture Capital and ANSS start-up funds, but major funding and long-term support for implementation has not yet been identified