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The role of observations in the inverse analysis of landslide propagation
Institution:1. Department of Architecture and Civil Engineering, City University of Hong Kong, Tat Chee Avenue, Kowloon, Hong Kong;2. State Key Laboratory of Water Resources and Hydropower Engineering Science, Key Laboratory of Rock Mechanics in Hydraulic Structural Engineering, Ministry of Education, Wuhan University, 8 Donghu South Road, Wuhan, PR China
Abstract:Model calibration is usually based on trial-and-error procedures that, in turn, rely on expert judgment or previously acquired experiences for similar phenomena. Efficient and reliable procedures for model calibration of the propagation stage of landslides are still needed. This paper addresses this issue by proposing an inverse analysis procedure and applying it to the case history of a short run-out landslide triggered by a rising perched water table after a heavy rainfall. It focuses on the key role played by the field observations used to set up the inverse analysis, and evaluating the reliability of the numerical simulations. It also investigates the effect of different types of optimization parameters on the inverse analysis results, referring to a mixed-phase model or to a two-phase model for the propagating soil. Several sets of observations are used; all of them refer to the soil deposit thickness at the end of propagation, but differ in both location and number of the adopted values. The numerical analysis of the case history is performed through the academic “GeoFlow_SPH” model, and model calibration by inverse analysis is conducted using the “UCODE” software. The results obtained are discussed with the aim to provide practical criteria to identify the minimum amount of information required for a satisfactory model calibration.
Keywords:Landslide  Propagation  Modelling  Back-analysis  Optimization  Calibration
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