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You have reached the home page of the Source-Inversion Validation ('''SIV''') project, initiated and lead
by Martin Mai (KAUST), Danjiel Schorlemmer (USC Los Angeles) and Morgan Page (USGS Pasadena).
This site has just been re-created after a server-hacking, and will now been progressively updated.
You have reached the WIKI of the Source-Inversion Validation ('''SIV''') project, initiated and lead by Martin Mai (KAUST), Danjiel Schorlemmer (USC Los Angeles / GFZ Potsdam) and Morgan Page (USGS Pasadena).

The '''SIV'''-project investigates the uncertainty in earthquake source inversion through a series of verification & validation experiments. Seismic data (often augmented with geodetic measurements) are used since the early 1980s for imaging the kinematic properties of earthquake ruptures on geological faults. Although many techniques have been developed to solve this generally ill-posed inverse problem, the inherent uncertainties in the resulting earthquake source models are poorly understood. Incompletely known Earth structure, simplifications in assumed fault geometry, data processing steps, and parameterization of the inversion problem strongly affect the resulting source image. Yet, these different aspects are rarely treated consistently and comprehensively in any source-inversion study to fully capture the uncertainty of the kinematic rupture model.

The '''SIV'''-project thus gathers a large number of seismologists interested in earthquake source inversion to perform a series of (code) verification and (inversion) validation experiments to better understand the uncertainty in past and current source-inversion approaches and to develop strategies for rigorous uncertainty quantification for future earthquake source studies.
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 :: [[http://eqsource.webfactional.com/home| Benchmarks]]  :: [[http://eqsource.webfactional.com/home| Benchmark Database]]

Welcome

You have reached the WIKI of the Source-Inversion Validation (SIV) project, initiated and lead by Martin Mai (KAUST), Danjiel Schorlemmer (USC Los Angeles / GFZ Potsdam) and Morgan Page (USGS Pasadena).

The SIV-project investigates the uncertainty in earthquake source inversion through a series of verification & validation experiments. Seismic data (often augmented with geodetic measurements) are used since the early 1980s for imaging the kinematic properties of earthquake ruptures on geological faults. Although many techniques have been developed to solve this generally ill-posed inverse problem, the inherent uncertainties in the resulting earthquake source models are poorly understood. Incompletely known Earth structure, simplifications in assumed fault geometry, data processing steps, and parameterization of the inversion problem strongly affect the resulting source image. Yet, these different aspects are rarely treated consistently and comprehensively in any source-inversion study to fully capture the uncertainty of the kinematic rupture model.

The SIV-project thus gathers a large number of seismologists interested in earthquake source inversion to perform a series of (code) verification and (inversion) validation experiments to better understand the uncertainty in past and current source-inversion approaches and to develop strategies for rigorous uncertainty quantification for future earthquake source studies.

The menu-items below lead you to different subsections; they are also available in the Menu section to the left.

  • Contents

Introduction

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Discussion

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Benchmark Database

Home (last edited 2013-03-27 21:03:39 by eqsource)