Exploring the model space and ranking a best class of models in surface-wave dispersion inversion: Application at European strong-motion sites

Author:

Di Giulio Giuseppe1,Savvaidis Alexandros2,Ohrnberger Matthias3,Wathelet Marc4,Cornou Cecile4,Knapmeyer-Endrun Brigitte3,Renalier Florence4,Theodoulidis Nikos2,Bard Pierre-Yves4

Affiliation:

1. Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Rome, Italy; Institute of Engineering Seismology & Earthquake Engineering, EPPO-ITSAK, Thessaloniki, Greece..

2. Institute of Engineering Seismology & Earthquake Engineering, EPPO-ITSAK, Thessaloniki, Greece..

3. University of Potsdam, Institute of Earth and Environmental Science, Potsdam, Germany..

4. Université Joseph Fourier, Institut des Sciences de la Terre, Grenoble, France..

Abstract

The inversion of surface-wave dispersion curve to derive shear-wave velocity profile is a very delicate process dealing with a nonunique problem, which is strongly dependent on the model space parameterization. When independent and reliable information is not available, the selection of most representative models within the ensemble produced by the inversion is often difficult. We implemented a strategy in the inversion of dispersion curves able to investigate the influence of the parameterization of the model space and to select a “best” class of models. We analyzed surface-wave dispersion curves measured at 14 European strong-motion sites within the NERIES EC-Project. We focused on the inversion task exploring the model space by means of four distinct parameterization classes composed of layers progressively added over a half-space. The classes differ in the definition of the shear-wave velocity profile; we considered models with uniform velocity as well as models with increasing velocity with depth. At each site and for each model parameterization, we performed an extensive surface-wave inversion (200,100 models for five seeds) using the conditional neighborhood algorithm. We addressed the model evaluation following the corrected Akaike’s information criterion (AICc) that combines the concept of misfit to the number of degrees of freedom of the system. The misfit was computed as least-squares estimation between theoretical and observed dispersion curve. The model complexity was accounted in a penalty term by AICc. By applying such inversion strategy on 14 strong-motion sites, we found that the best parameterization of the model space is mostly three to four layers over a half-space; where the shear-wave velocity of the uppermost layers can follow uniform or power-law dependence with depth. The shear-wave velocity profiles derived by inversion agree with shear-wave velocity profiles provided by borehole surveys at approximately 80% of the sites.

Publisher

Society of Exploration Geophysicists

Subject

Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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