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[[Sarada K. Sarma|Sarma]] worked in the area of seismic analysis of earth dams under [[Nicholas Ambraseys|Ambraseys]] at [[Imperial College]] for his doctoral studies in the mid 1960s.<ref>Sarma S. K. (1968) ''[https://spiral.imperial.ac.uk/bitstream/10044/1/16071/2/Sarma-SK-1968-PhD-Thesis.pdf Response characteristics and stability of earth dams during strong earthquakes]''. PhD Thesis, Imperial College of Science & Technology, University of London</ref> The methods for seismic analysis of dams available at that time were based on the [[Slope stability analysis#Limit equilibrium analysis|Limit Equilibrium]] approach and were restricted to planar or circular failures surfaces adopting several assumptions regarding force and moment equilibrium (usually satisfying one of the two) and about the magnitude of the forces (such as interslice forces being equal to zero).
Sarma looked into the various available methods of analysis and developed a new method for analysis in seismic conditions and calculating the permanent displacements due to strong shaking. His method was published in the 1970s (the very first publication was in 1973<ref>{{Cite journal | last1 = Sarma | first1 = S. K. | title = Stability analysis of embankments and slopes | doi = 10.1680/geot.1973.23.3.423 | journal = Géotechnique | volume = 23 | issue = 3 | pages = 423–433 | year = 1973 |
==Method==
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===Use===
The method is used mainly for two purposes, to analyse earth slopes and earth dams. When used to analyse seismic slope stability it can provide the factor of safety against failure for a given earthquake load, i.e. horizontal seismic force
When the method is used in the analysis of earth dams (i.e. the slopes of the dam faces), the results of the analysis, i.e. the critical acceleration is used in the [[Newmark's sliding block]] analysis <ref>Newmark, N. M. (1965) Effects of earthquakes on dams and embankments. Geotechnique, 15 (2) 139–160.</ref> in order to calculate the induced permanent displacements. This follows the assumption that displacements will result if the earthquake induced accelerations exceed the value of the critical acceleration for stability.
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===General acceptance===
The Sarma method has been extensively used in seismic analysis software for many years and has been the standard practice until recently for seismic slope stability for many years (similar to the [[Mononobe–Okabe method]]
===Modern alternatives===
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Sarma Method}}
[[Category:Landslide analysis, prevention and
[[Category:Earthquake engineering]]
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