PSHA after a strong earthquake: hints for the recovery

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L. Peruzza
R. Gee
B. Pace
G. Roberts
O. Scotti
F. Visini
L. Benedetti
M. Pagani

Abstract

We perform aftershock probabilistic seismic hazard analysis (APSHA) of the ongoing aftershock sequence following the Amatrice August 24th, 2016 Central Italy earthquake. APSHA is a time-dependent PSHA calculation where earthquake occurrence rates decrease after the occurrence of a mainshock following an Omori-type decay. In this paper we propose a fault source model based on preliminary evidence of the complex fault geometry associated with the mainshock. We then explore the possibility that the aftershock seismicity is distributed either uniformly or non-uniformly across the fault source. The hazard results are then computed for short-intermediate exposure periods (1-3 months, 1 year). They are compared to the background hazard and intended to be useful for post-earthquake safety evaluation.

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How to Cite
Peruzza, L., Gee, R., Pace, B., Roberts, G., Scotti, O., Visini, F., Benedetti, L. and Pagani, M. (2016) “PSHA after a strong earthquake: hints for the recovery”, Annals of Geophysics, 59. doi: 10.4401/ag-7257.
Section
Letters

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