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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2015-07-07
    Description: Seismic arrays have many uses for signal enhancement, from surface‐wave characterization of the near surface to teleseismic detection in the context of monitoring nuclear tests. Many variants of the geometrical configuration of stations have been used with the objective of maximizing potential resolution of the incoming wavefronts direction of arrival. A versatile class of array configurations, with good resolution properties, can be constructed with multiple spiral arms. The array response is comparable with the same number of full circles, but with far fewer stations and is robust to minor position changes in emplacement. The desirable properties of the spiral‐arm arrays are illustrated for a permanent array in the Precambrian Pilbara craton in northwestern Australia and for a temporary array on ancient sediments in southern Queensland, Australia. In each case, the practical array response is very good and matches the theoretical expectations. The spiral‐arm configuration allows the deployment of relatively large aperture arrays with a limited number of stations, which is advantageous in a broad range of seismic applications, including near‐surface characterization.Online Material: Figures illustrating the relation between spiral‐arm and multiring circular arrays.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2014-10-21
    Description: This study explores the full 3D earthquake location for the Australian continent, exploiting the recent 3D Australian Seismological Reference Model (AuSREM). Seismic velocities from AuSREM were used as input to precompute finely spaced P- and S-travel-time grids for each station in the Australian National Seismograph Network using the multistage fast marching method. Travel times from anywhere in the grid to the corresponding station can then be computed by interpolation. The location search using these travel times is based on matching observed and computed arrival times using the neighborhood algorithm. All computations involved can be performed in practical time frames on a single processor computer. The performance of the 3D approach relative to location using the 1D global ak135 velocity model was assessed by locating a set of recent earthquakes. The arrival-time residuals for P and S arrivals are significantly smaller when using the 3D AuSREM model. The improvements over ak135 are especially large in the 10 degrees -18 degrees distance range, in which a distance bias is strongly reduced and for those paths where the ak135 residuals are large. A small set of six ground-truth events was used to assess to what extent the reduction in travel-time residuals leads to better absolute location accuracy. The 3D location offset from the ground-truth position is typically half that of the ak135 offset. The patterns of offsets suggest that the already fast mantle wavespeeds in western Australia need to be even faster than in AuSREM.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2007-04-01
    Description: Various location procedures and velocity models are compared for the M (sub L) 3.3 Kara Sea event of 16 August 1997. This event has been the subject of considerable discussion because of its geographical position and the difficulty in obtaining a reliable focal-depth estimate. A comprehensive data set was extracted by (re-)reading the records from all available stations. These readings have then been used in a sequence of location experiments to examine the effect of using different velocity models to describe the travel times of the phases, and also to compare the use of a fully nonlinear scheme (shakeNA; Sambridge and Kennett, 2001) and a linearized location algorithm (HYPOSAT; Schweitzer, 2001, 2002). A standard least-squares misfit criterion has been used for direct comparisons between the two methods. The results confirm both the importance of S-wave information in assessing the depth of regional events, and the need to apply a reliable velocity model to place the strongest constraints on the location of the event. Even with only a limited data set, but an adequate velocity model, it is possible to find the position of the Kara Sea event close to the most probable locations; however, there is then no depth resolution. Reported error ellipses from standard data centers tend to have relatively small error ellipses. With the commonly made assumption that the reading errors and the a posteriori residuals have an unbiased normal distribution, such inversion results may indicate an unreasonably high resolution and accuracy of the solution. The epicenter estimates for the whole data set using the range of different techniques agree quite well, with some overlap of the estimated confidence regions. The observed seismic source was most likely an earthquake in the middle or lower crust at about 10-30 km depth.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2003-08-01
    Description: For arrays with a small number of elements, such as those deployed in infrasound detection, the theoretical pattern of beam power associated with the incidence of a plane wave shows a broad main beam with strong side lobes. A novel approach to the estimation of the parameters of the incoming wave field is proposed based on the exploitation of the full beam pattern for the array. The pattern of beam power over a limited mask of beam points in slowness space is compared with the theoretical predictions over a set of narrow frequency bands and the set of signal parameters that give the best fit determined by an inversion using a Neighbourhood Algorithm (NA). The angle of incidence and azimuth provide a convenient parameter set since they can be used to include corrections for elevation differences between the sensors in the process of beamforming. Because the theoretical beam pattern depends only on the array geometry and frequency band, it can be computed on a dense grid and interpolation carried out to provide the beam power across the beam mask for a specified set of angular parameters. The NA inversion with an L (sub 1.3) measure of misfit in beam power is able to achieve good definition of the minimum misfit with only 120 trials, and the level of fit itself provides a good measure of the validity of the model of a single dominant plane wave. The NA approach is supplemented by a contracting grid method using a set of self-similar grid masks that can rapidly locate the position of maximum beam power. The two methods provide a valuable tool for real-time analysis, with both independent estimates of the angular parameters and a measure of the quality of the results.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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