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Q: How does it work?
A:
A hammer blow or mechanical
device generates dispersive waves which travel along the surface of the earth
analogous to ocean waves. The energy is measured at a small number
of sensors to find the phase velocity vs. frequency of the waves. The depth of penetration and the mechanical properties (shear-wave velocities) of the
materials directly below the observation point are sensed. If two-dimensional information is required, the active geophones are rolled along the surface to produce a shear-wave velocity cross-section.
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Q: What is the geologic
model?
A:
Layered geologic or manmade materials
without the requirement that the velocities increase with depth. Thus,
the velocity within a gravel base can be measured beneath pavement
in some cases. The engineering model is the measurement of the layer-weighted average shear-wave velocity of the top 100 feet (or 30 meters). This engineering model is important because of the adoption of the International Building Code which requires this number (Vs100 or Vs30) to set the seismic site class for foundation design.
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Q: What are the
requirements?
A: A
reasonable source such as a bulldozer, accelerated weight drop, interstate
highway, busy airport, or gravel processing facility or even ambient noise in some urban areas.
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Q: What are the
pitfalls?
A: Interpretation
is subject to ambiguity as velocities can be traded off
for structure and higher-mode excitations may interfere. Very susceptible
to lateral variations on the scale of the depth of investigation.
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Q: What logistics
are needed?
A:
Crew size is 1-2 persons, equipment is portable though sources may
not be if significant depth is required.
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Q: What are the
deliverables?
A: Plan maps
of station locations, amplitude vs. frequency plots, inversion for
velocities vs. depth, ambiguity estimates, geologic interpretation,
and a narrative description of the work. The IBC site class velocity is produced, but engineering judgement is necessary to insert Vs100 into foundation design.
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There is no additional information about SASW or MASW available on this website.