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Using Centrifugal Force to Study Natural Hazards
Episode 103

Using Centrifugal Force to Study Natural Hazards

DesignSafe Radio

December 7, 202110m 28s

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Show Notes

On this episode, natural hazards Jason DeJong discusses the experimental centrifuges, including the giant nine-meter centrifuge, at the UC Davis Center for Geotechnical Modeling, a NHERI facility. DeJong explains how rapidly spinning centrifuges create “hypergravity” — a force up to 200 Gs — to study how structures and soil withstand natural hazards. 

Here’s how it works: researchers place a physical model in the centrifuge bucket and subject it to a high-speed, hypergravity field. Then, using equations, they scale the loading forces proportionate to the model. This crazy, high-speed environment, enables scientists to see and measure the stresses of earthquakes, waves and wind on natural and built environments.

“That proportional scale is amazing. We can simulate real-world systems that we can’t really do any other way.” - Jason DeJong

Jason DeJong  

NHERI UC Davis Centrifuge

Topics

natural hazard mitigationnatural hazardsnsfnheriearthquake engineeringjason dejongnsf fundedcentrifugeuc davisearthquake research