Characteristics and impact of environmental shaking in the Taipei metropolitan area

Author:

Chen Kate Huihsuan,Yeh Ting-Chen,Chen Yaochieh,Johnson Christopher W.,Lin Cheng-Horng,Lai Ya-Chuan,Shih Min-Hung,Guéguen Philippe,Huang Win-Gee,Huang Bor-Shouh,Chen Kou-Cheng,Lin Chin-Jen,Ku Chin-Shang

Abstract

AbstractExamining continuous seismic data recorded by a dense broadband seismic network throughout Taipei shows for the first time, the nature of seismic noise in this highly populated metropolitan area. Using 140 broadband stations in a 50 km × 69 km area, three different recurring, strong noise signals characterized by dominant frequencies of 2–20 Hz, 0.25–1 Hz, and < 0.2 Hz are explored. At frequencies of 2–20 Hz, the seismic noise exhibits daily and weekly variations, and a quiescence during the Chinese New Year holidays. The largest amplitude occurred at a station located only 400 m from a traffic-roundabout, one of the busiest intersections in Taipei, suggesting a possible correlation between large amplitude and traffic flow. The median daily amplitude for the < 0.2 Hz and 0.2–1.0 Hz frequency bands is mostly synchronized with high similarity between stations, indicating that the sources are persistent oceanic or atmospheric perturbations across a large area. The daily amplitude for the > 2 Hz band, however, is low, indicating a local source that changes on shorter length scales. Human activities responsible for the 2–40 Hz energy in the city, we discovered, are able to produce amplitudes approximately 2 to 1500 times larger than natural sources. Using the building array deployed in TAIPEI 101, the tallest building in Taiwan, we found the small but repetitive ground vibration induced by traffic has considerable effect on the vibration behavior of the high-rise building. This finding urges further investigation not only on the dynamic and continuous interaction between vehicles, roads, and buildings, but also the role of soft sediment on such interaction.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan

Laboratory Directed Research and Development at Los Alamos National Lab.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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