Announcing Shakemovie.caltech.edu
Announcing shakemovie.caltech.edu – Caltech’s near real-time simulation of Southern California Seismic Events Portal.
ShakeMovie is a new portal, serving movies made from simulations of earthquakes of magnitude 3.5 and above happening in the Southern California Region, only 45 minutes after the actual event.
This portal has been designed to present the public with near real time visualizations of recent significant seismic events in the Southern California Region. These movies are the results of simulations carried out on a large computer cluster. When an earthquake occurs, seismic waves are generated which propagate away from the fault rupture.
In the example shown above – a magnitude 5.0 event from Feb 22, 2003 centered three miles north of Big Bear City, CA (click for ~5MB mpeg movie file) – we see the up-and-down velocity of the Earth’s surface. Strong blue waves indicate the surface is moving rapidly downward. Strong red waves indicate rapid upward motion. When the waves pass through soft soils (sediments) they slow down and amplify. Waves speed up when they pass through hard rock. The color of the waves oscillates between red and blue indicating alternating up and down motion.
Shakemovie was created by Caltech’s Seismological Laboratory, Instrumental Software Technologies, Inc. and Caltech’s Center for Advanced Computing Research. The project is sponsored by the United States Geological Survey, the National Science Foundation, Dell Inc, and the Southern California Seismic Network.
ShakeMovie is found at: http://shakemovie.caltech.edu.








