Entry: intensity
URI: https://registry.epos-eu.org/ncl/FAIR-Incubator/tcs-SEISMO/18
A cumulative measure of the effects of an earthquake at a particular place at the Earth�s surface on humans and (or) structures and thus a measure of the strength of earthquake shaking. Different from magnitude, the intensity at a point depends not only on the earthquake strength (released seismic energy) or earthquake size (released seismic moment), but also on the epicentral distance, the focal depth, the position of the observation point with respect to the type of focal mechanism and its directivity, and the local site conditions. Intensity values are usually given as integer Roman numerals ranging from 0 to 12 (see intensity scales, macroseismic). Although coarse, they are a valuable complementary analogue for physical ground motion parameters, correlating best with ground velocity. Moreover, intensity of shaking, based on the assessment of real post-event damage, is a suitable site-related empirical risk estimator for scenario calibrations. Intensity is now also quantitatively estimated using ground motion measurements; such quantitative intensity measurement is called �Instrumental Intensity� to distinguish it from the qualitative seismic intensity.
Core metadata
is a | Concept |
submitted by | Tendry R |
accepted on | 10 Feb 2022 10:24:49.671 |
Download formats available
RDF ttl | plain | with metadata |
RDF/XML | plain | with metadata |
JSON-LD | plain | with metadata |
CSV | plain | with metadata |
Export all | export |
All metadata properties
date accepted |
10 Feb 2022 10:24:49.671
|
||||
date submitted |
10 Feb 2022 10:16:37.310
|
||||
definition |
|
||||
description |
A cumulative measure of the effects of an earthquake at a particular place at the Earth�s surface on humans and (or) structures and thus a measure of the strength of earthquake shaking. Different from magnitude, the intensity at a point depends not only on the earthquake strength (released seismic energy) or earthquake size (released seismic moment), but also on the epicentral distance, the focal depth, the position of the observation point with respect to the type of focal mechanism and its directivity, and the local site conditions. Intensity values are usually given as integer Roman numerals ranging from 0 to 12 (see intensity scales, macroseismic). Although coarse, they are a valuable complementary analogue for physical ground motion parameters, correlating best with ground velocity. Moreover, intensity of shaking, based on the assessment of real post-event damage, is a suitable site-related empirical risk estimator for scenario calibrations. Intensity is now also quantitative...
|
||||
item class |
Concept
|
||||
label |
intensity
|
||||
notation |
18
|
||||
register |
tcs sEISMO
|
||||
status |
status experimental
|
||||
submitter |
|
||||
type |
register item
|
||||
version info |
2
|
Definition
broader |
macroseismic
|
description |
A cumulative measure of the effects of an earthquake at a particular place at the Earth�s surface on humans and (or) structures and thus a measure of the strength of earthquake shaking. Different from magnitude, the intensity at a point depends not only on the earthquake strength (released seismic energy) or earthquake size (released seismic moment), but also on the epicentral distance, the focal depth, the position of the observation point with respect to the type of focal mechanism and its directivity, and the local site conditions. Intensity values are usually given as integer Roman numerals ranging from 0 to 12 (see intensity scales, macroseismic). Although coarse, they are a valuable complementary analogue for physical ground motion parameters, correlating best with ground velocity. Moreover, intensity of shaking, based on the assessment of real post-event damage, is a suitable site-related empirical risk estimator for scenario calibrations. Intensity is now also quantitative...
|
label |
macroseismic intensity
|
notation |
18
|
pref label |
intensity
|
type |
Concept
|