seismic section plotter - definição. O que é seismic section plotter. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é seismic section plotter - definição

STUDY OF THE RESPONSE OF BUILDINGS/STRUCTURES TO EARTHQUAKES
Seismic design; Seismic performance; Seismic performance analysis

Seismic intensity scales         
  • Isoseismal map for the [[1968 Illinois earthquake]], showing the extent of different levels of shaking. The irregularity of areas is due to ground conditions and the underlying geology.
SCALE USED TO MEASURE EARTHQUAKE INTENSITY
Seismic intensity scale; Seismic intensity
Seismic intensity scales categorize the intensity or severity of ground shaking (quaking) at a given location, such as resulting from an earthquake. They are distinguished from seismic magnitude scales, which measure the magnitude or overall strength of an earthquake, which may, or perhaps may not, cause perceptible shaking.
quarter section         
  • Perfectly square 160-acre quarter sections of farmland cover Central [[Indiana]].
  • Section map of [[Rock Creek Township, Saunders County, Nebraska]] (1907)
SQUARE SUBDIVISION OF A U.S. SURVEY TOWNSHIP
Section (land); Section (U.S. land surveying); Section (United states land surveying); Quarter section; Section line; Section line arterial; Section lines; Section (surveying); Quarter-quarter section
¦ noun N. Amer. a quarter of a square mile.
plotter         
  • Illustration of the layers of flex and flock foils (used in textile printing): carrier foil, colour coat & covering layer (including hot melt)
  • Inkjet plotter
  • Label plotter
COMPUTER OUTPUT DEVICE THAT DRAWS ON OR CUTS INTO PAPER OR OTHER MATERIALS BY MOVING A PEN OR KNIFE
X–Y plotter; Xy plotter; Vinyl sign cutter; Pen plotter; X-Y plotter; Cutting plotter; Plotter (printer); Flatbed plotter; Line plotter; Ink plotter; XY-writer; XY writer; X-Y-writer; X/Y-writer
n.
Contriver, conspirator, schemer.

Wikipédia

Seismic analysis

Seismic analysis is a subset of structural analysis and is the calculation of the response of a building (or nonbuilding) structure to earthquakes. It is part of the process of structural design, earthquake engineering or structural assessment and retrofit (see structural engineering) in regions where earthquakes are prevalent.

As seen in the figure, a building has the potential to 'wave' back and forth during an earthquake (or even a severe wind storm). This is called the 'fundamental mode', and is the lowest frequency of building response. Most buildings, however, have higher modes of response, which are uniquely activated during earthquakes. The figure just shows the second mode, but there are higher 'shimmy' (abnormal vibration) modes. Nevertheless, the first and second modes tend to cause the most damage in most cases.

The earliest provisions for seismic resistance were the requirement to design for a lateral force equal to a proportion of the building weight (applied at each floor level). This approach was adopted in the appendix of the 1927 Uniform Building Code (UBC), which was used on the west coast of the United States. It later became clear that the dynamic properties of the structure affected the loads generated during an earthquake. In the Los Angeles County Building Code of 1943 a provision to vary the load based on the number of floor levels was adopted (based on research carried out at Caltech in collaboration with Stanford University and the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, which started in 1937). The concept of "response spectra" was developed in the 1930s, but it wasn't until 1952 that a joint committee of the San Francisco Section of the ASCE and the Structural Engineers Association of Northern California (SEAONC) proposed using the building period (the inverse of the frequency) to determine lateral forces.

The University of California, Berkeley was an early base for computer-based seismic analysis of structures, led by Professor Ray Clough (who coined the term finite element. Students included Ed Wilson, who went on to write the program SAP in 1970, an early "finite element analysis" program.

Earthquake engineering has developed a lot since the early days, and some of the more complex designs now use special earthquake protective elements either just in the foundation (base isolation) or distributed throughout the structure. Analyzing these types of structures requires specialized explicit finite element computer code, which divides time into very small slices and models the actual physics, much like common video games often have "physics engines". Very large and complex buildings can be modeled in this way (such as the Osaka International Convention Center).

Structural analysis methods can be divided into the following five categories.