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Motion magnification analysis applied to the dynamic identification of historic constructions

TitleMotion magnification analysis applied to the dynamic identification of historic constructions
Publication TypeAtti di Congresso
Year of Publication2018
AuthorsFioriti, Vincenzo, Roselli Ivan, Tatì Angelo, Romano R., and De Canio Gerardo
Conference NameInternational Conference Florence Heri-Tech: the Future of Heritage Science and technologies
Volume364
PublisherIOP Publishing
Conference LocationFirenze
ISBN17578981
KeywordsAmbient vibration monitoring, Ancient buildings, Atmospheric refractions, Damage detection, Dynamic identification, Frequency domain analysis, Frequency domains, Historic structures, Light reflection, Motion analysis, Outdoor environment, Structural health monitoring, Urban environments
Abstract

We applied a new methodology, namely the motion magnification (MM), to the dynamic identification of historic constructions. MM acts like a microscope amplifying small motions in video sequences, therefore tiny motion patterns are made visible with the naked eye. This technique provides advantages of particular interest to the dynamic identification: no wires, no physical contact, simplicity and low costs. In this paper, we investigated the ambient vibration monitoring of historic structures in urban environments, which is a relevant issue for the health surveying and early damage detection, particularly for ancient buildings. We give an introduction to the MM methodology and describe its practical application to the frequency domain through two case-studies: the so-called Temple of Minerva Medica of Rome and the Ponte delle Torri of Spoleto. Since in the outdoor environment the MM is much more prone to noise because of the wind, shadows, atmospheric refraction, light reflection, distance from the object, weak vibration sources, the case study of the Ponte delle Torri represents a hard test-bed for MM. However, the MM estimates of the first modes showed a good agreement with the experimental data of contact velocimeters.

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85049361573&doi=10.1088%2f1757-899X%2f364%2f1%2f012001&partnerID=40&md5=eeaf391a9764cb9172d2499673cae98c
DOI10.1088/1757-899X/364/1/012001
Citation Key6444