Seismology and Wave Physics
The Solid Earth is in a constant state of oscillation. This is caused by various phenomena such as ocean waves, atmospheric turbulences or earthquakes, which set off seismic waves.
These waves pass through the Earth at speeds of more than 10 km per second at times, collecting data about its inner structure – just as an x-ray passes through the human body, gathering information.
The group led by Andreas Fichtner makes use of recordings of seismic waves, GPS data on deformations of the Earth’s surface, and data on the Earth’s gravitational field as a means of better understanding the structure and evolution of the Earth and the characteristics of large earthquakes. The most important tool are computer simulations of seismic wave propagation and of earthquake processes in geologically active regions of the world. These simulations take advantage of modern supercomputers such as Monte Rosa and Piz Daint at the Swiss National Supercomputing Centre (CSCS) in Lugano. With the aid of graphics devices originally developed for use in image processing for video games, the state-of-the-art CSCS supercomputers are able to calculate seismic waves and earthquakes with a degree of precision that would take a conventional desktop computer more than 100 million years to achieve.
This combination of modern mathematical methods of computer simulation, along with the availability of high-performance computers at the CSCS, make it possible to study the structure and dynamics of the Earth with unprecedented accuracy. Enormous amounts of data can be exploited, which a regular computer would not be able to process, let alone store.
Interdisciplinary cooperation is key to the work of this group, which functions as a link between various branches of the natural sciences, ranging from mathematics and physics to information technology and seismology, to geodynamics, tectonics and geology.
Kontakt
- Location location_onNO H 39.1
- Phone phone+41 44 632 25 97
- Fax print+41 44 633 10 65
- web_asset Detail page
Institut für Geophysik
Sonneggstrasse 5
8092
Zürich
Switzerland