General Earthquake Models:
Numerical Laboratories for Understanding
The Physics of Earthquakes
(Earthquake Seismology as an Experimental Science)
A Proposed Role Within the
Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC)
and the Planned
California Earthquake Research Center (CERC)
by:
John Rundle
Colorado Center for Chaos & Complexity
University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309
J.-Bernard Minster
IGPP, SIO
Unversity of California, San Diego 92093
A Consensus Proposal from the
General Earthquake Model Working Group
Members:
Claude Allegre, IPG & French Science Ministry, Paris, France
Yehuda Ben-Zion, University of Southern California
Jacobo Bialek, Carnegie Mellon University
William Bosl, Stanford University
David Bowman, University of Southern California
Charles Carrigan, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA
James Crutchfield, Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe, NM
Julian Cummings, ACL, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM
Steven Day, San Diego State University
Geoffrey Fox, NPAC, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY
William Foxall, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA
Roscoe Giles, Boston University, Boston, MA
Rajan Gupta, ACL, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Tom Henyey, SCEC and University of Southern California
Thomas H. Jordan, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA
Hiroo Kanamori, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA
Steven Karmesin, ACL, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM
Charles Keller, IGPP, Los Alamos National Laboratory
William Klein, Boston University, Boston, MA
Karen Carter Krogh, EES, Los Alamos National Laboratory, NM
Shawn Larsen, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA
Christopher J. Marone, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA
John McRaney, SCEC and University of Southern California
Paul Messina, CACR, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA
J.-Bernard Minster, University of California, San Diego, CA
David O'Halloran, Carnegie Mellon University
Lawrence Hutchings, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA
Jon Pelletier, California Institute of Technology
John Reynders, ACL, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM
John B. Rundle, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO
John Salmon, CACR, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA
Charles Sammis, University of Southern California
Steven Shkoller, CNLS Los Alamos National Laboratory
Stewart Smith, University of Washington
Ross Stein, United States Geological Survey, Menlo Park, CA
Leon Teng, University of Southern California
Donald Turcotte, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
Michael Warren, ACL, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM
Andrew White, ACL. Los Alamos National Laboratory
Bryant York, Northeastern University, Boston, MA
General Earthquake Models (GEM's)
1. What are they?
2. What is the purpose?
3. How would the process work?
Goal
is to produce an evolving, increasingly sophisticated group of codes that can compute all observable variables from a numerical simulation of synthetic earthquakes in a given spatial region over a given period of time to a given space-time resolution, or space-time scale
To produce a believable simulation, one needs
Two Kinds of GEM "Products"
1. Numerical Laboratories (NL mode) for Studying the Physics of Earthquakes
GEM - type NL models can address many of these issues, if we can adequately validate them
2. Testbeds for Developing and Testing Numerical Earthquake Forecasting (NEF mode) Methodologies
Problems:
NEF models must be approached with extreme caution so as not to misuse them
Advantages to GEM's
1. Provides one means of "attaching priorities" to the various observational, laboratory, numerical, and theoretical tasks
2. A focus and an organizing principle for earthquake science:
3. GEM's are fundamentally an earthquake science activity, the results of which represent necessary inputs to engineering hazard calculations
4. GEM's are timely, in the sense that:
5. Interactions with parallel efforts in Japan (CAMP) and Australia (ACES) will be enabled by GEM-type approach
6. Advances in earthquake science will now be coupled to advances in computational science, enabling access to a broader array of scientific talent and resources
Objections to GEM's
1. Simulations can only reproduce previously "known" results, i.e., "You can only get out what you put in..."
Counterexamples:
2. "GCM's are fundamentally unlike the earthquake problem, since they have Navier-Stokes equations"
Ah, yes,but they DON'T have, for example:
While we DO have:
Relationship of GEM to
SCEC and "CERC
"
Two Basic Possibilities:
GEM to be a subgroup, or "Working Group" within Center, similar to role of SCIGN within SCEC
GEM to be integrated into the core of the Center, as one of the "alphabet soup" groups, similar to Seismology Group, Deformation Group, Master Model Group, etc.
Choice Depends on:
Organization of GEM Activity
1: "Lead Investigator" or "Group Chair" or "Coordinator" or whatever...
2: "Working Group", or "Steering Committee"
3: "Activities", or "Task Forces"
Short Term Testbed Problem
Our workshop identified a focus problem: Quasi-static evolutions of stress field - California
1: Model:
2: Inputs:
3: Outputs:
4: Relevance:
Longer Term Foci of GEM
1: Enabling large scale simulations
2: Assessing the role and importance of sub-grid scale processes:
3: Assessing importance of wave and inertial dynamics in determining the evolution of the system for highly three dimensional models
4: How do space-time patterns and correlations form, and how can we interpret them. (Feedback loops)
GEM Models: What are We Looking For in Earthquake Source Physics?
1: Cataloging Space-Time Patterns
2: Identifying the Parameters that Control the Physics
3: Role of Unmodeled, or Sub-Grid Scale Faults, Processes
Universality:
CERC: Suggestions for Founding Principles
Generality vs. Specificity
Statistical Physics vs. Deterministic
(high dimensional complex) (low dimensional chaotic)
Integrate Models & Simulations with Data Collection
CERC: Suggestions for Organization
Statewide Director & PI, plan for rotating director
One Institution should be "Managing Institution" through which money flows...USC?
Northern & Southern "Coordinators"
Build carefully on success of SCEC, don't expand too much, too fast!
New name to symbolically differentiate New Center from Old
Less frequent topical seminars:
Projects should not be focussed on field sites, but on scientific problems...project teams should include personnel from both north & south