Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/16646
Authors: Pischiutta, Marta* 
Rovelli, Antonio* 
Salvini, Francesco* 
Fletcher, Jon B* 
Savage, Martha K* 
Title: Directional Amplification at Rock Sites in Fault Damage Zones
Journal: Applied Sciences 
Series/Report no.: /13 (2023)
Publisher: MDPI
Issue Date: 2023
DOI: 10.3390/app13106060
Abstract: Site effects refer to the modification of ground shaking caused by the local geological con- ditions that can result in the strong amplification of ground motion. The best-known cause for site effects is the presence of superficial soft soil deposits, which are considered in seismic design codes of many countries through the use of scaling factors. Rock sites are assumed to show no local site amplification. However, even at rock sites, seismic waves can be locally amplified at frequencies of engineering interest, with larger motion along one site-specific azimuth on the horizontal plane (the so called “directional site resonance or amplification”). These effects have been related to the pres- ence of large-scale open cracks or microcracks in different geological environments (faults, land- slides, volcanic areas) everywhere with a common signature: maximum amplification occurs trans- verse to the predominant fracture strike. In this paper, we summarize our main results obtained in the last decade with regard to several fault zones with different kinematics, where ground motion is polarized (and amplified) perpendicularly to the predominant fracture field as an effect of the stiffness anisotropy. In order to give a further constraint, we also show some cases where the direc- tional amplification effects were compared with the S-wave splitting analysis method.
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