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1.
Summary. This paper discusses several aspects of the calculation of theoretical seismograms for two-dimensional inhomogeneous media with the method of Gaussian beams. The most important steps of this method, kinematic and dynamic ray tracing, can be performed very efficiently, if the model cross-section is subdivided into triangles with linear velocity laws. Each Gaussian beam is characterized by a complex beam constant ε which determines its width and phase-front curvature. Various possibilities to choose ε are discussed, including cases where beam properties at the beam endpoint (and not at the beginning) are prescribed; for instance, the beam width at the endpoint can be specified. In such cases the beam constant is a function of the radiation angle at the source, and the decomposition of a cylindrical wave into beams has to take this into account by weighting the beams differently, at least in principle. The exact weight function is derived and shown to be reasonably well approximated by the weight function, corresponding to angle-independent ε Theoretical seismograms are presented for a laterally heterogeneous model of the crust–mantle transition which is characterized by complications in the reflection from the transition and in the refraction from below. These complications are modelled by and large with success. The seismograms, however, depend to a certain extent on the choice of the beam constant. Moreover, according to the reciprocity principle calculations with source and receiver interchanged should have the same results as calculations for the original configuration. In practice this is not so, and the difference increases with the strength of lateral heterogeneities. Hence, for a successful application of Gaussian beams the model should not vary too strongly in lateral direction.  相似文献   

2.
Summary. Several approaches to computing body wave seismograms in 2–D and 3–D laterally inhomogeneous layered structures are suggested. They are based on the Gaussian beam method, which has been recently applied to the evaluation of time-harmonic high-frequency wavefields in inhomogeneous media. Three variants are discussed in some detail: the spectral method, the convolutory method and the wave-packet method. The most promising seems to be the wave-packet approach. In this approach, the wavefield, generated by a source, is expanded into a system of wave packets, which propagate along rays from the source in all directions. The wave packets change their properties due to diffusion, spreading, reflections/transmissions, etc. The resulting seismogram at any point of the medium is then obtained as a superposition of those packets which propagate close to the point. The final expressions in all the three methods are regular even in regions, in which the ray method fails, e.g. in the vicinity of caustics, in the critical region, at boundaries between shadow and illuminated regions, etc. Moreover, they are not as sensitive to the minor details of the medium as the ray method and, what is more, they remove the time-consuming two-point ray tracing from computations. Numerical examples of synthetic seismograms computed by the wave-packet approach are presented.  相似文献   

3.
Summary. Use of paraxially approximated Gaussian beams continues to be actively pursued for construction of synthetic seismograms in complicated environments. How to select the beams in the stack remains a source of difficulty which has primarily been addressed by semi-heuristic considerations. In this paper, the classical example of line-source field reflection from a homogeneous half-space that can sustain a head wave is examined from a plane-wave spectral point of view. The individual beam fields are modelled exactly by the complex source point technique, which emphasizes the complex spectral content of these wave objects. The quality of the paraxial approximation of a typical reflected (Gaussian) beam characterized by different parameters is examined from this perspective, and is compared with uniform and non-uniform asymptotics generated from the exact beam field spectral integral. With this information as background, the reflected field for a real line-source is synthesized by beam superposition. Except for the immediate vicinity of the critical reflection angle, the well-known failure of narrow paraxial beams, no matter how densely stacked, to reproduce the head wave effects is shown to be due to the inadequate spectral content of these beams and not to the failure of beam stacking per se. When the rigorous solutions are used for the narrow-waist beams, even relatively few suffice to yield agreement with the exact solution. This circumstance emphasizes the importance of fully understanding the spectral implications of various beam stacking schemes.  相似文献   

4.
Gaussian beams in elastic 2-D laterally varying layered structures   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Summary. In a paper by Červený & Pšenčik, high-frequency Gaussian beams in elastic 2-D, laterally inhomogeneous, smooth media were investigated as asymptotic high-frequency solutions of elastodynamic equations, concentrated close to rays of P - and S -waves. This paper generalizes the above results for 2-D, laterally inhomogeneous, layered structures. Gaussian beams concentrated close to any multiply-reflected, possibly converted, ray are investigated. Gaussian beams are regular everywhere, including caustic regions. The paraxial ray approximation, which allows the wavefield in the zero-order ray approximation to be evaluated not only directly on the ray, but also in its vicinity, is derived as a limiting case of the Gaussian beams.  相似文献   

5.
Summary. Several important applications of the paraxial ray approximation (PRA) to numerical modelling of high-frequency seismic body wavefields are discussed. The PRA can be used to evaluate the displacement vector not only directly on the ray, as in the standard ray method. but also approximately in the vicinity of this ray. The PRA also offers simple ways of approximate evaluation of paraxial rays, situated in the vicinity of the central ray, and of two-point ray tracing. A very important application of the PRA consists in a simple, fast and effective Computation of body-wave synthetic seismograms in general, 3-D, laterally inhomogeneous, layered structures. Examples of synthetic seismograms for 3-D structures, computed using the PRA, are presented.  相似文献   

6.
Summary. An algorithm for the computation of travel times, ray amplitudes and ray synthetic seismograms in 3-D laterally inhomogeneous media composed of isotropic and anisotropic layers is described. All 21 independent elastic parameters may vary within the anisotropic layers. Rays and travel times are evaluated by numerical solution of the ray tracing equations. Ray amplitudes are determined by evaluating reflection/ transmission coefficients and the geometrical spreading along individual rays. The geometrical spreading is computed approximately by numerical measurement of the cross-sectional area of the ray tube formed by three neighbouring rays. A similar approximate procedure is used for the determination of the coefficients of the paraxial ray approximation. The ray paraxial approximation makes computation of synthetic seismograms on the surface of the model very efficient. Examples of ray synthetic seismograms computed with a program package based on the described algorithm are presented.  相似文献   

7.
Gaussian beams in two-dimensional elastic inhomogeneous media   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Summary. Asymptotic high-frequency solutions of elastodynamic equations in two-dimensional laterally inhomogeneous media concentrated close to rays of P - and S -waves are investigated. From a physical point of view, these vectorial solutions correspond to Gaussian beams; the amplitude distribution of their principal components is bell-shaped along the direction perpendicular to the ray. The principal component of the elastodynamic Gaussian beam is controlled by the parabolic equation, which has exactly the same form as the parabolic equation for scalar Gaussian beams. The elastodynamic Gaussian beams are regular everywhere, including caustics.  相似文献   

8.
Summary. An asymptotic procedure for the computation of wave fields in two-dimensional laterally inhomogeneous media is proposed. It is based on the simulation of the wave field by a system of Gaussian beams. Each beam is continued independently through an arbitrary inhomogeneous structure. The complete wave field at a receiver is then obtained as an integral superposition of all Gaussian beams arriving in some neighbourhood of the receiver. The corresponding integral formula is valid even in various singular regions where the ray method fails (the vicinity of caustic, critical point, etc.). Numerical examples are given.  相似文献   

9.
Summary. Two approaches to travel-time computations in laterally inhomogeneous anisotropic media are presented. The first method is based on ray tracing in an anisotropic inhomogeneous medium, the second on the linearization procedure. The linearization procedure, which can be applied to inhomogeneous, slightly anisotropic media, does not require ray tracing in an anisotropic medium. Applications of linearized equations to the solutions of direct and inverse kinematic problems are discussed. A program package to perform the linearized computations for rather general 2-D laterally inhomogeneous layered structures is described and a numerical example is presented.  相似文献   

10.
We have been developing an accurate and efficient numerical scheme, which uses the finite-difference method (FDM) in spherical coordinates, for the computation of global seismic wave propagation through laterally heterogeneous realistic Earth models. In the field of global seismology, traditional axisymmetric modeling has been used widely as an efficient approach since it can solve the 3-D elastodynamic equation in spherical coordinates on a 2-D cross-section of the Earth, assuming structures to be invariant with respect to the axis through the seismic source. However, it has the severe disadvantages that asymmetric structures about the axis cannot be incorporated and the source mechanisms with arbitrary shear dislocation have not been attempted for a long time. Our scheme is based on the framework of axisymmetric modeling but has been extended to treat asymmetric structures, arbitrary moment-tensor point sources, anelastic attenuation, and the Earth center which is a singularity of wave equations in spherical coordinates. All these types of schemes which solve 3-D wavefields on a 2-D model cross-section are classified as 2.5-D modeling, so we have named our scheme the spherical 2.5-D FDM. In this study, we compare synthetic seismograms calculated using our FDM scheme with three-component observed long-period seismograms including data from stations newly installed in Antarctica in conjunction with the International Polar Year (IPY) 2007–2008. Seismic data from inland Antarctica are expected to reveal images of the Earth's deep interior with enhanced resolution because of the high signal-to-noise ratio and wide extent of this region, in addition to the rarity of sampling paths along the rotation axis of the Earth. We calculate synthetic seismograms through the preliminary reference earth model (PREM) including attenuation using a moment-tensor point source for the November 9, 2009 Fiji earthquake. Our results show quite good agreement between synthetic and observed seismograms, which indicates the accuracy of observations in the Antarctica, as well as the feasibility of the spherical 2.5-D modeling scheme.  相似文献   

11.
A method for calculating synthetic seismograms in laterally varying media   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Summary An effective algorithm for computing synthetic seismograms in laterally inhomogeneous media has been developed. The method, based on zero-order asymptotic ray theory, is primarily intended for use in refraction and reflection studies and provides an economical means of seismic modelling.
A given smoothed velocity-depth-distance model is divided into small squares with constant seismic parameters and first-order interfaces are represented by an arbitrary number of dipping linear segments. The computation of ray propagation and amplitudes through such a model does not involve complicated analytic expressions and therefore minimizes computer time.
Amplitudes are determined by geometrical spreading of spherical wave-fronts and energy partitioning at interfaces. Synthetic seismograms calculated for laterally homogeneous models are in good agreement with those obtained by the Reflectivity Method.  相似文献   

12.
Digital filter smoothing methods for shot-noise-limited data are addressed in this study.The preferredmethod is based on a Gaussian filter in which the width of the Gaussian filter function is varied dependingon the estimate of the second derivative of the raw data.This filter is developed from the standpoint ofmaximum likelihood parameter estimation of the probability density function which describes shot-noise-limited data.The smoothing filter is tested and compared with the conventional sequential regressionfilter.This adaptive Gaussian smoothing filter works better than both the sequential regression and theadaptive Gaussian filter derived for normal noise.For data containing both high-and low-frequencycomponents,the limiting step in the adaptive filter is an estimation of the smoothing interval.Methodsfor determining an optimum smoothing interval are discussed.With the optimized smoothing interval,the adaptive Gaussian filter works well for data sets with a wide range of varying frequency components.In particular,synthetic data typical of atomic emission spectra are used to test this smoothing filter.  相似文献   

13.
Summary. The Green's function, in a constant gradient medium, is derived for an explosive point source, in the frequency and the time domains. The analytical dynamic ray tracing (DRT) solution is rederived with conditions stated in Part I. The Gaussian beam (GB) solution is investigated. New beam parameters and conditions are defined. Comparisons between exact and approximate solutions are undertaken.
For both methods, DRT and GB, conditions of validity are explicit and quantitative. An accuracy criterion is defined in the time domain, and measures a global relative error. The range of validity is expressed in the form of two inequalities for the dynamic ray tracing method and of five inequalities for the Gaussian beam method. Results remain accurate at ray turning points. For the types of medium considered, the breakdown of the dynamic ray tracing method is smoother and better behaved than that of Gaussian beams. As examples, a vertical seismic profiling configuration, and a shallow earthquake are modelled, using Gaussian beams.  相似文献   

14.
Summary. Some relations between Gaussian beams, complex rays and the analytic extension of the Green's function in smoothly inhomogeneous media are shown in this paper. It is found that: (1) a single Gaussian beam is a paraxial approximation of the analytical extension of the ray-approximated Green's function in smoothly inhomogeneous media by putting the source point into a complex space. The Gaussian beam approximation of the Green's function has an advantage in computational efficiency and stability and can avoid the singularity problems at caustics, but also introduces a parabolic approximation to the wavefront and an angle-dependent amplitude damping. Therefore the validity of the Gaussian beam approximation should be checked using other methods. (2) Complex-ray tracing, which does not involve the paraxial approximation, can also avoid the singularity problemsm though without the computational efficiency. Therefore, it should be used to verify the Gaussian beam approximation, whenever possible. (3) The decomposition of a plane wave into an ensemble of Gaussian beams is equivalent to approximating the Green's function (the kernel of the ray-Kirchhoff method) with a single Gaussian beam. This introduces a parabolic approximation to the wavefront and a Gaussian windowing for arrival angles which may cause some problems in modelling wave propagation and scattering and has no advantages over other methods. (4) The representation of a point source field by a superposition of Gaussian beams, on the other hand, is equivalent to approximating the Green's function with a bundle of overlapped Gaussian beams. This representation is similar to a Maslov uniform asymptotic representation. It has no caustics and has improved accuracies at the caustics for quasi-plane waves compared to the extended WKBJ method.  相似文献   

15.
Summary. The Gaussian beam method has recently been introduced into synthetic seismology to overcome shortcomings of the ray method, especially in transition regions due to focusing or diffraction where ray theory fails. One proceeds by discretizing the initial data as a superposition of paraxial Gaussian beams, each of which is then traced through the seismic environment. Since Gaussian beam fields do not diverge in ray transition regions, they are 'uniformly regular' although the quality of this regularity depends on the beam parameters and on the 'numerical distance' which defines the extent of the transitional domain. However, when Gaussian beam patches are used to simulate non-Gaussian initial data, there arise ambiguities due to choice of patch size and location, beam width, etc., which are at the user's disposal. The effects of this arbitrariness have customarily been explored by trial and error numerical experiment but no quantitative recommendations have emerged as yet. As a step toward a priori predictive capability, it is proposed here to perform a systematic study on analytically tractable prototype models of how the parameters and location of a single beam affect the quality of the observed seismic field, especially in ray transition regions. The conversion of ordinary ray fields into beam fields in canonical configurations can be accomplished conveniently by displacing a real source point into a complex coordinate space. Thus, the desired beam solutions can be obtained directly from available ray, and even paraxial ray, fields. Complex ray theory and its implications are reviewed here, with an emphasis on improvements of beam tracking schemes employed at present.  相似文献   

16.
Summary. The method of finite differences is applied to the elastic wave equation to generate synthetic seismograms for laterally varying seafloor structures. The results are compared with borehole seismic data from the Gulf of California (Deep Sea Drilling Project Site 485) in which lines were shot over flat and rough topography. The significant new phenomenon observed in both the synthetic seismograms and the field data is the generation of a 'double head wave' due to the interaction of the incident wavefront with the side of a hill and the flat seafoor adjacent to the hill.
In these models the hills are on the order of a seismic wavelength in height and steep velocity gradients occur over distances comparable to wavelengths. Ray theoretical methods would not be suitable for studying such structures. True amplitude record sections are obtained by the finite difference method, which show for these models that the head wave generated at the flat seafloor adjacent to the hill is lower in amplitude than if the hill were not present and is lower in amplitude than the head wave generated at the hill.
A second feature which is important for borehole receivers is the existence of the 'direct wave root' in the upper basement. This energy occurs below the sharp interface when the direct wave impinges on the interface from above. There is no corresponding Snell's law ray path for this energy and the energy is evanescent with depth in the lower medium.
The properties of both the double head wave and the direct wave root are clearly demonstrated in the finite difference 'snapshot' displays.  相似文献   

17.
Synthetic seismograms are shown and discussed for the case of the receiver within the medium. Most of the discussion is on the reflectivity method with the receiver within the reflectivity zone, but results using the ray method are shown for comparison. Such synthetic seismograms can be used to interpret data from Oblique Seismic Experiments where shots generated on the surface up to large ranges are recorded in crustal boreholes.  相似文献   

18.
Some remarks on the Gaussian beam summation method   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Summary. Recently, a method using superposition of Gaussian beams has been proposed for the solution of high-frequency wave problems. The method is a potentially useful approach when the more usual techniques of ray theory fail: it gives answers which are finite at caustics, computes a nonzero field in shadow zones, and exhibits critical angle phenomena, including head waves. Subsequent tests by several authors have been encouraging, although some reported solutions show an unexplained dependence on the 'free' complex parameter ε which specifies the initial widths and phases of the Gaussian beams.
We use methods of uniform asymptotic expansions to explain the behaviour of the Gaussian beam method. We show how it computes correctly the entire caustic boundary layer of a caustic of arbitrary complexity, and computes correctly in a region of critical reflection. However, the beam solution for head waves and in edge-diffracted shadow zones are shown to have the correct asymptotic form, but with governing parameters that are explicitly ε-dependent. We also explain the mechanism by which the beam solution degrades when there are strong lateral inhomogeneities. We compare numerically our predictions for some representative, model problems, with exact solutions obtained by other means.  相似文献   

19.
We propose a vertical array analysis method that decomposes complex seismograms into body and surface wave time histories by using a velocity structure at the vertical array site. We assume that the vertical array records are the sum of vertically incident plane P and S waves, and laterally incident Love and Rayleigh waves. Each phase at the surface is related to that at a certain depth by the transfer function in the frequency domain; the transfer function is obtained by Haskell's matrix method, assuming a 1-D velocity structure. Decomposed P , S and surface waves at the surface are estimated from the vertical array records and the transfer functions by using a least-squares method in the frequency domain; their time histories are obtained by the inverse Fourier transform. We carried out numerical tests of this method based on synthetic vertical array records consisting of vertically incident plane P and S waves and laterally incident plane Love and Rayleigh waves. Perfect results of the decomposed P , S , Love and Rayleigh waves were obtained for synthetic records without noise. A test of the synthetic records in which a small amount of white noise was added yielded a reasonable result for the decomposed P , S and surface waves. We applied this method to real vertical array records from the Ashigara valley, a moderate-sized sedimentary valley. The array records from two earthquakes occurring at depths of 123 and 148 km near the array (epicentral distance of about 31 km) exhibited long-duration later phases. The analysis showed that duration of the decomposed S waves was a few seconds and that the decomposed surface waves appeared a few seconds after the direct S -wave arrival and had very long duration. This result indicated that the long-duration later phases were generated not by multireflected S waves, but by basin-induced surface waves.  相似文献   

20.
Seismic imaging of the laterally varying D" region beneath the Cocos Plate   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We use an axisymmetric, spherical Earth finite difference algorithm to model SH -wave propagation through cross-sections of laterally varying lower mantle models beneath the Cocos Plate derived from recent data analyses. Synthetic seismograms with dominant periods as short as 4 s are computed for several models: (1) a D" reflector 264 km above the core–mantle boundary with laterally varying S -wave velocity increases of 0.9–2.6 per cent, based on localized structures from a 1-D double-array stacking method; (2) an undulating D" reflector with large topography and uniform velocity increase obtained using a 3-D migration method and (3) cross-sections through the 3-D mantle S -wave velocity tomography model TXBW. We apply double-array stacking to assess model predictions of data. Of the models explored, the S -wave tomography model TXBW displays the best overall agreement with data. The undulating reflector produces a double Scd arrival that may be useful in future studies for distinguishing between D" volumetric heterogeneity and D" discontinuity topography. Synthetics for the laterally varying models show waveform variability not observed in 1-D model predictions. It is challenging to predict 3-D structure based on localized 1-D models when lateral structural variations are on the order of a few wavelengths of the energy used, particularly for the grazing geometry of our data. Iterative approaches of computing synthetic seismograms and adjusting model characteristics by considering path integral effects are necessary to accurately model fine-scale D" structure.  相似文献   

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