Takao Kagawa1, *Shohei Yoshida1, Hiroshi Ueno1 (1.Tottori University Graduate School of Engineering)
Session information
[EJ] Poster
S (Solid Earth Sciences) » S-CG Complex & General
[S-CG70] [EJ] Analysis and Prediction of Near-Source Strong Ground Motions: Present Status and Future Perspective
Wed. May 24, 2017 10:45 AM - 12:15 PM Poster Hall (International Exhibition Hall HALL7)
convener:Kimiyuki Asano(Disaster Prevention Research Institute, Kyoto University), Takao Kagawa(Tottori University Graduate School of Engineering), Hongjun Si(Seismological Research Institute Inc.), Haruo Horikawa(Institute of Earthquake and Volcano Geology, National Institute for Advanced Science and Technology)
Damaging earthquakes such as the 1994 Northridge and the 1995 Kobe earthquakes drew attention to near-source strong ground motions in seismological and earthquake engineering communities. Many important strong motion records have been accumulated with the progress of strong motion observation, and such important strong motion data drove the studies on the generation mechanism of near-source strong ground motions. Accumulation of scientific knowledge on near-source ground motion generation has made substantial progress in development of strong motion prediction during the decades, and results of strong motion prediction have been widely applied to producing hazard maps and investigation of design basis ground motions for important facilities. The 2016 Kumamoto earthquake sequence generated severe strong ground motions in near-fault area with observation of JMA intensity of 7 for two times, and it raised new issues on strong motion prediction for active faults. Ocean-bottom strong motion observation networks such as S-net and DONET are also launching, and these new networks would be expected to provide near-source strong ground motion records even in ocean area. Thus, it is timely to review the progress of studies for near-source strong ground motions and discuss future perspectives for advancing strong motion prediction methods. We widely invite contributions from all aspects of this subject.
*Susumu Kurahashi1, Ken Miyakoshi2, Kojiro Irikura1 (1.Aichi Institute of Technology, 2.Geo-Research Institute)
*Yosuke Nagasaka1, Atsushi Nozu1 (1.Port and Airport Research Institute)
*Atsuko Oana1, Kazuo Dan2, Junichi Miyakoshi2, Hiroyuki Fujiwara3, Nobuyuki Morikawa3, Takahiro Maeda3 (1.Shimizu Corporation, 2.Ohsaki Research Institute, 3.National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Resilience)
*Kazuhiro Somei1, Takaaki Ikeda2, Toshimitsu Nishimura1, Ken Miyakoshi1 (1.Geo-Research Institute, 2.Nagaoka University of Technology)
*Haruko Sekiguchi1, Kimiyuki Asano1, Tomotaka Iwata1 (1.DPRI, Kyoto University)
*Junpei Kaneda1, Yoshiaki Hisada1 (1.Kogakuin University)
*Kunikazu Yoshida1, Ken Miyakoshi1 (1.Geo-Research Institute)
*Yifei Chen1, Hiroe Miyake2 (1.GSII, The University of Tokyo, 2.III, The University of Tokyo)
*Hiroe Miyake1, Kazuki Koketsu1, Takashi Furumura1, Koji Miyakawa1, Shinichi S Tanaka1 (1.Earthquake Research Institute, University of Tokyo)