Tobias Diehl: Katalogdaten im Herbstsemester 2021

NameHerr Dr. Tobias Diehl
Adresse
Schweiz. Erdbebendienst (SED)
ETH Zürich, NO FO 69.7
Sonneggstrasse 5
8092 Zürich
SWITZERLAND
Telefon+41 44 632 04 98
E-Mailtobias.diehl@sed.ethz.ch
URLhttp://www.seismo.ethz.ch/research/groups/alrt/people/tdiehl/index
DepartementErd- und Planetenwissenschaften
BeziehungDozent

NummerTitelECTSUmfangDozierende
651-4014-00LSeismic Waves II3 KP2GT. Diehl, F. Lanza, A. Obermann
KurzbeschreibungThis course provides an overview on the most widely used seismological methods to image the Earth’s interior with a focus on crustal and upper-mantle structures. Topics include controlled source methods such as refraction and wide-angle reflection, as well as passive body-wave and surface-wave based methods. The course will discuss the strengths and weaknesses of each method.
LernzielUnderstand the strengths and weaknesses of various active and passive tomographic methods to image the structure of the Earth.
Literatur-Stein, S., Wysession, M., & Stein, S. (Ed.) (2003). Introduction to Seismology, Earthquakes, and Earth Structure. Blackwell Publishing.
-Lay, T. and T. C. Wallace, Modern Global Seismology, Academic Press, San Diego, 1995. A very basic seismology textbook. Chapters 2 through 4 provide a useful introduction to the contents of this course.
-Menke, W., Geophysical Data Analysis: Discrete Inverse Theory, revised edition, Academic Press, San Diego, 1989. A very complete textbook on inverse theory in geophysics.
-Press, W. H., S. A. Teukolsky, W. T. Vetterling and B. P. Flannery, Numerical Recipes, Cambridge University Press. The art of scientific computing.
-Aki, K. and P. G. Richards, Quantitative Seismology, second edition, University Science Books, Sausalito, 2002. The most standard textbook in seismology, for grad students and advanced undergraduates.
-Dahlen, F. A. and J. Tromp, Theoretical Global Seismology, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1998. A very good book, suited for advanced graduate students with a strong math background.
-Kennett B.L.N., The Seismic Wavefield. Volume I: Introduction and Theoretical Development (2001). Volume II: Interpretation of Seismograms on Regional and Global Scales (2002). Cambridge University Press.
-Trefethen, L. N. and D. Bau III, Numerical Linear Algebra, Soc. for Ind. and Appl. Math., Philadelphia, 1997. A textbook on the numerical solution of large linear inverse problems, designed for advanced math undergraduates.
651-4015-00LEarthquakes I: Seismotectonics3 KP2GA. P. Rinaldi, T. Diehl
KurzbeschreibungIf you're interested in knowing more about the relationship between seismicity and plate tectonics, this is the course for you. (If you're not that interested, but your program of study requires that you complete this course, this is also the course for you.)
LernzielThe aim of the course is to obtain a basic understanding of the physical process behind earthquakes and their basic mathematical description. By the conclusion of this course, we hope that you will be able to:
- describe the relationship between earthquakes and plate tectonics in a more sophisticated and complete way
- explain earthquake source representations of varying complexity;
- address earthquakes in the context of different tectonic settings;
- explain the statistical behaviour of global earthquakes
- describe and connect the ingredients for a seismotectonic study
InhaltThe course features a series of 14 meetings, in which we review some fundamentals of continuum mechanics and tensor analysis required for a complete understanding of the relation between earthquakes and plate tectonics. Our goal is to help you understand deformation the small scale (fault) to the scale of plate tectonics. We will tell you about several ways to represent an earthquake source; we'll present these in order of increasing sophistication. You will enjoy (at least) a computer/class exercise and a guest lecture.

Topics covered in the course include:
review of stress and deformation in the Earth, stress and strain tensors, rheology and failure criteria, fault stresses, friction and effects of fluids
earthquake focal mechanisms; relationship between stress fields and focal mechanisms;
seismic moment and moment tensors;
crustal deformation from seismic, geologic, and geodetic observations;
earthquake stress drop, scaling, and source parameters;
global earthquake distribution; current global earthquake activity;
different seismotectonic regions; examples of earthquake activity in different tectonic settings.
SkriptCourse notes will be made available on a designated course web site. Most of the topics discussed in the course are available in the book mentioned below.
LiteraturS. Stein and M. Wyssession, An introduction to seismology, earthquakes and earth structure, Blackwell Publishing, Malden, USA, (2003).
Voraussetzungen / BesonderesBasic knowledge of continuum mechanics and rock mechanics, as well as notion of tensor analysis is strongly suggested. We recommend to have taken the course Continuum Mechanics (generally taught during the Fall semester).


This course will be taught in fall 2017 and it will be followed by Earthquakes 2: Source Physics in Spring 2018.

The course will be evaluated in a final written test covering the topics discussed during the lectures.

The course will be worth 3 credit points, and a satisfactory total grade (4 or better) is needed to obtain 3 ECTS.

The course will be given in English.