Post on 21-Dec-2015
www.see-grid-sci.eu
SEE-GRID-SCI
SEE-GRID-SCI SEISMOLOGY VO
The SEE-GRID-SCI initiative is co-funded by the European Commission under the FP7 Research Infrastructures contract no. 211338
Wiki Pages: http://wiki.egee-see.org/index.php/SG_Seismology_VO
Vision: converged communication and service infrastructure for SEE
GRNET.gr
MTA SZTAKI .hu
IPP .bg
ICI .ro
TUBITAK.tr
UPT.al
UKIM.mk
UoBL.ba
RBI.hr
UOB.rs
RENAM.md
UOM.me
GRENA.ge
IIAP-NAS-RA.am
SEEFIRE + Geant Support
SEE-GRID
SeismologyVO
MeteorologyVO
EnvironmentalVO
SeismologyVO
MeteorologyVO
EnvironmentalVO
SEE-SCI
e-Infrastru
cture
The SEE-GRID-SCI initiative is co-funded by the European Commission under the FP7 Research Infrastructures contract no. 211338
Seismology VO (aims)
Seismology VO will offer the researchers: Seismic Data Repository: Earthquakes, stations and sensor
information, seismic waveform files from various countries in Southeastern Europe. Seismic Data Server Application Service (SDSAS), A JRA1 development that provides scripts to upload seismic data and iterators to access data.
Seismology Applications: Earthquake Location Finding (ELF) Fault Plane Solution (FPS) Massive Digital Seismological Signal Processing with the Wavelet Analysis
(MDSSP-WA) Numerical Modeling of Mantle Convection (NMMC3D) Seismic Data Server (SDS) Seismic Risk Assesment (SRA)
The SEE-GRID-SCI initiative is co-funded by the European Commission under the FP7 Research Infrastructures contract no. 211338
Seismology VO Platform
Country 1
Applications(ELF,FPS,MDSSP-WA,NMMC3D,SDS)
Programming tool (SDS data Iterators)
Earthquake and seismic waveform data
Earthquake and seismic waveform data
Earthquake and seismic waveform data
Country 2 Country n...
Distributed storage and indexing of data on grid (by SDSAS upload scripts)
Partner Institutes
Collaborating Organizations CountryPolytechnic University of Tirana AlbaniaNational Academy of Sciences of Armenia ArmeniaSeismological Department, in Geophysical Institute of BAS BulgariaDepartment of Geophysics in Institute of Geography and Earth Sciences of Eötvös Loránd University
Hungary
Seismological Observatory of Geodetic and Geophysical Research Institute of Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Hungary
Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics of University of Ss. Cyril and Methodius
FYR of Macedonia
Institute of Geology and Seismology of ASM MoldovaSeismological Survey of Serbia Serbia•Kandilli Observatory and Earthquake Research Institute / Dept. of Computer Engineering , Boğaziçi University
Turkey
Middle East Technical University TurkeyEarthquake Research Dept. of General Directorate of Disaster Affairs
Turkey
VO Infrastructure (core services)
VO usage/access
Helpdesk information: currently N/A A new Seismo VO Support group will be created in
https://helpdesk.see-grid.eu/
Howto get membership: https://voms.ulakbim.gov.tr:8443/voms/seismo.see-grid-sci.eu/
accepts applications for membership. VO-admin can process and accept these applications
“where to go if error”: Currently Bilal Bektas (bilal.bektas@gmail.com) is handling these Email groups will be created for this purpose
VO usage/access
Howto monitor the infrastructure: An SDSAS script will be developed for reporting current inventory of
seismic datar Use https://c01.grid.etfbl.net/sam.php for monitoring infrastructure
Available UI machine: currently N/A
Available developer portal: currently N/A Planning to use portal.grid.org.tr
Available tools and services: MyProxy, WMS, RB, BDII, VOMS, AMGA SDSAS
Applications
Earthquake Location Finding (ELF)
•This application is based on HYPO71 and finds the location of earthquakes by scanning
seismic waveform data.
•This application is not compute intensive , but it is data intensive. The application can
be parallelized by scanning data files in parallel by multiple using worker nodes.
•A workflow can be generated automatically by a program corresponding to the time
intervals in which to look for earthquake
•Contact: Mehmet Yılmazer , mehmety@boun.edu.tr
Fault Plane Solution (FPS)
Computes earthquake source parameters (strike, slip, dip)Inputs: Crust model: layer thicknesses, seismic velocities, densities, q-factor Actual seismic waveform data (in SAC format)
Output: Fault paramtheters
Useful for identifying tectonic structures that are not visible on earth’s surfaceComputationally intensive applicationA typical run that uses data from 50 stations takes 8 hours on a PCImplemented in Fortran/CContact: Mehmet Yılmazer , mehmety@boun.edu.tr
Massive Digital Seismological Signal Processing with the Wavelet Analysis(MDSSP-WA)
•Wavelet theory has matured in past years as new mathematical tool for time series analysis. •The continuous or discrete wavelet transforms and relevant plotting of the results in coordinate
system, scales versus time, shows striking similarity of the wavelet images, between different seismic
records, coming from the same source region or noticeable difference for records of earthquakes
occurred in different source region. •We assume that, those similar image patterns are due to same underlying geological setting while the
differences (usually for smaller scale) is due to different source mechanism and finer geological
structures. •In the first approximation of geological structure, similarities of the image patterns in domain of large
scale are noticeable even for the records from different source regions. •With massive processing of earthquake records we can define: (i) Common features of the
propagation path for the given seismic source region or to define empirical transfer function of the
media (ii) Calculation of the artificial seismograms, (iii) Determine the source region based on a
single earthquakes record (iv) Determine the more realistic attenuation curve of the selected feature
(parameter), very much needed in seismic hazard and risk analysis, (v) Mapping (coding) of the given
earthquake prone region in terms of selected parameters (vi)Seismic source parameters•Contact: Ljupco Jordanovski, ljordanovski@gmail.com
NUMERICAL MODELING OF MANTLE CONVECTION – NMMC3D
• The outer part of the Earth consist of moving, rotating and interacting plates. •The motion of these plates suggest a large convective system in the Earth's 2900 thick layer, the mantle. •The numerical calculations suggested that the convective cells are formed by sheet-like elongated downwellings (subduction zones) and narrow, cylindrical upwellings (mantle plumes, at the hotspots). •The main goal of our research is the quantitative study of the structure and surface manifestation of mantle plumes and to make systematic investigation of the parameters influencing the character of mantle convection in 3D.•Contact: Bálint Süle, suba@seismology.hu
SEISMIC RISK ASSESMENT (SRA)
• Seismic Risk Assessment is very important for public safety and hazards
mitigation. •It is also important for the correct determination of earthquake insurance
premiums and also for understanding the social and psychological
effects of earthquakes. •Our aim is to develop an application framework to allow us to embed
alternative (deterministic, probabilistic etc.) models. •SRA application can be grouped into four main categories:
(i) Accessing Earthquake Catalogue,
(ii) Earthquake Source Model
(iii) Seismic Hazard Models
(iv) Producing Seismic Hazard Maps•Contact: Cevat Şener, sener@ceng.metu.edu.tr
Seismic Data Server Application Service (SDSAS)
•SDSAS is a JRA1 service that serves massive seismic data that are archived from national seismology centers using a high level interface that is easy to use/adapt. It serves official lists of earthquakes, stations , sensor information. •It keeps the details of where the data files reside are hidden by mapping high level user specifications (dates, hours, location etc.) to appropriate pathnames. •The SDSAS implementation will be done by using scripts to collect and organizing the seismic data by utilizing storage elements, LFC and AMGA . •C++ iterators can be used by applications to access station data, earthquake data and information about seismic waveform files.•Contact: Can Özturan, ozturaca@boun.edu.tr
Seismic Data Server (SDS)
•SDS serves seismic data present in AMGA tables (station data,
earthquake data and information about seismic waveform
files - not waveform files themselves) through a web interface
that utilizes kml and Google Earth API.
•Contact: Can Özturan, ozturaca@boun.edu.tr
VO application specific information
N/A yet since most applications are under development currentlySDSAS usage instructions are available on the see-grid-sci wiki