Neill SLee RBradley, BrendonGraves R2019-09-032019-09-032019Neill S, Lee R, Bradley B, Graves R (2019). Preliminary examination of kinematic rupture parameter variability in simulated ground motions. Auckland: Pacific Conference on Earthquake Engineering. 04/04/2019-06/04/2019.http://hdl.handle.net/10092/17055This paper investigates the effects of variability in source rupture parameters on site-specific physics-based simulated ground motions, ascertained through the systematic analysis of ground motion intensity measures. As a preliminary study, we consider simulations of the 22 February 2011 Christchurch earthquake using the Graves and Pitarka (2015) methodology. The effects of source variability are considered via a sensitivity study in which parameters (hypocentre location, earthquake magnitude, average rupture velocity, fault geometry and the Brune stress parameter) are individually varied by one standard deviation. The sensitivity of simulated ground motion intensity measures are subsequently compared against observational data. The preliminary results from this study indicate that uncertainty in the stress parameter and the rupture velocity have the most significant effect on the high frequency amplitudes. Conversely, magnitude uncertainty was found to be most influential on the spectral acceleration amplitudes at low frequencies. Further work is required to extend this preliminary study to exhaustively consider more events and to include parameter covariance. The ultimate results of this research will assist in the validation of the overall simulation method’s accuracy in capturing various rupture parameters, which is essential for the use of simulated ground motion models in probabilistic seismic hazard analysis.enPreliminary examination of kinematic rupture parameter variability in simulated ground motionsConference Contributions - Published2019-07-10Fields of Research::40 - Engineering::4005 - Civil engineering::400506 - Earthquake engineeringFields of Research::37 - Earth sciences::3706 - Geophysics::370609 - Seismology and seismic exploration