leeStruct
Structural
- Oct 2, 2009
- 22
Hello, everyone,
Our client in Europe brought a very tough question for us to answer, we designed a structure for them based on UBC seismic zone 3. They want to know, what magnitude of Richter scale earthquake it can resist, Richter 6, 6.5, 6.8 or what so ever. In other words, they want to know a certain relationship between UBC seismic zone designed structure and the Richter scale earthquake it can withstand.
I understand these two conceptions are two totally different conceptions and there is no correlation between these two. Say seismic 3 means the peak ground acceleration z= 0.3g, while, say Richter 6 earthquake means the energy released by the earthquake equals 6 calculated from the formula: ML=lgA-lgA0(delta). But is there possibly an empirical formula to relate this peak ground acceleration to the energy the earthquake relieved?
Thanks a lot for your help.
Our client in Europe brought a very tough question for us to answer, we designed a structure for them based on UBC seismic zone 3. They want to know, what magnitude of Richter scale earthquake it can resist, Richter 6, 6.5, 6.8 or what so ever. In other words, they want to know a certain relationship between UBC seismic zone designed structure and the Richter scale earthquake it can withstand.
I understand these two conceptions are two totally different conceptions and there is no correlation between these two. Say seismic 3 means the peak ground acceleration z= 0.3g, while, say Richter 6 earthquake means the energy released by the earthquake equals 6 calculated from the formula: ML=lgA-lgA0(delta). But is there possibly an empirical formula to relate this peak ground acceleration to the energy the earthquake relieved?
Thanks a lot for your help.