Seismic Simulations Using Parallel Computing and Three-Dimensional Earth Models to Improve Nuclear Explosion Phenomenology and Monitoring

Abstract

The development of accurate numerical methods to simulate wave propagation in three-dimensional (3D) earth models and advances in computational power offer exciting possibilities for modeling the motions excited by underground nuclear explosions. This presentation will describe recent work to use new numerical techniques and parallel computing to model earthquakes and underground explosions to improve understanding of the wave excitation at the source and path-propagation effects. Firstly, we are using the spectral element method (SEM, SPECFEM3D code of Komatitsch and Tromp, 2002) to model earthquakes and explosions at regional distances using available 3D models. SPECFEM3D simulates an elastic wave propagation in fully 3D earth models in spherical geometry with the ability to account for free surface topography, anisotropy, ellipticity, rotation and gravity. Results show in many cases that 3D models are able to reproduce features of the observed seismograms that arise from path-propagation effects (e.g., enhanced surface wave dispersion, refraction, amplitude variations from focusing and defocusing, tangential component energy from isotropic sources). We are currently investigating the ability of different 3D models to predict path-specific seismograms as a function of frequency. A number of models developed using a variety of methodologies are available for testing. These include the WENA/Unified model of Eurasia (e.g. Pasyanos et al 2004), the global CUB 2.0 model (Shapiro and Ritzwoller, 2002), the partitioned waveform model for the Mediterranean (van der Lee et al., 2007) and stochastic models of the Yellow Sea Korean Peninsula region (Pasyanos et al., 2006). Secondly, we are extending our Cartesian an elastic finite difference code (WPP of Nilsson et al., 2007) to model the effects of free-surface topography. WPP models an elastic wave propagation in fully 3D earth models using mesh refinement to increase computational speed and improve memory efficiency. Thir

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 01, 2008
Accession Number
ADA516106

Entities

People

  • Anders Petersson
  • Arthur J. Rodgers
  • Bjorn A. Sjogreen
  • Caroline Bono
  • Eric Matzel
  • Ilya N. Lomov
  • Micael E. Pasyanos
  • Oleg Vorobiev
  • Tarabay H. Antoun
  • William R. Walter

Organizations

  • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Computational Science
  • Doppler Effect
  • Earth Models
  • Elastic Waves
  • Explosions
  • Frequency
  • Geometry
  • Ground Based
  • Nuclear Explosions
  • Parallel Computing
  • Simulations
  • Surface Waves
  • Three Dimensional
  • Topography
  • Two Dimensional
  • Wave Phenomena
  • Wave Propagation

Readers

  • Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD)
  • Seismology