Title of article
Geophysical Finite-Element Simulation Tool (GeoFEST): Algorithms and Validation for Quasistatic Regional Faulted Crust Problems
Author/Authors
Jay Parker، نويسنده , , Gregory Lyzenga، نويسنده , , Charles Norton، نويسنده , , Cinzia Zuffada، نويسنده , , Margaret Glasscoe ، نويسنده , , John Lou، نويسنده , , Andrea Donnellan and Diane L. Evans، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
25
From page
497
To page
521
Abstract
GeoFEST (Geophysical Finite Element Simulation Tool) is a two- and three-dimensional finite
element software package for the modeling of solid stress and strain in geophysical and other continuum domain
applications. It is one of the featured high-performance applications of the NASA QuakeSim project. The program
is targeted to be compiled and run on UNIX systems, and is running on diverse systems including sequential and
message-passing parallel systems. Solution to the elliptical partial differential equations is obtained by finite
element basis sampling, resulting in a sparse linear system primarily solved by conjugate gradient iteration to a
tolerance level; on sequential systems a Crout factorization for the direct inversion of the linear system is also
supported. The physics models supported include isotropic linear elasticity and both Newtonian and power-law
viscoelasticity, via implicit quasi-static time stepping. In addition to triangular, quadrilateral, tetrahedral and
hexahedral continuum elements, GeoFEST supports split-node faulting, body forces, and surface tractions. This
software and related mesh refinement strategies have been validated on a variety of test cases with rigorous
comparison to analytical solutions. These include a box-shaped domain with imposed motion on one surface, a pair
of strike slip faults in stepover arrangement, and two community-agreed benchmark cases: a strike slip fault in an
enclosing box, and a quarter-domain circular fault problem. Scientific applications of the code include the
modeling of static and transient co- and post-seismic earth deformation, Earth response to glacial, atmospheric and
hydrological loading, and other scenarios involving the bulk deformation of geologic media.
Journal title
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Record number
430198
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