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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Geophysical prospecting 40 (1992), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1365-2478
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: In spite of a geometrical rotation into radial and transverse parts, two- or three-component in-seam seismic data used for underground fault detection often suffer from the problem of overmoding ‘noise’. Special recompression filters are required to remove this multimode dispersion so that conventional reflection seismic data processing methods, e.g. CMP stacking techniques, can be applied afterwards.A normal-mode superposition approach is used to design such multimode recompression filters. Based on the determination of the Green's function in the far-field, the normal-mode superposition approach is usually used for the computation of synthetic single- and multi-mode (transmission) seismograms for vertically layered media. From the filter theory's point of view these Green's functions can be considered as dispersion filters which are convolved with a source wavelet to produce the synthetic seismograms. Thus, the design of multimode recompression filters can be reduced to a determination of the inverse of the Green's function. Two methods are introduced to derive these inverse filters. The first operates in the frequency domain and is based on the amplitude and phase spectrum of the Green's function. The second starts with the Green's function in the time domain and calculates two-sided recursive filters.To test the performance of the normal-mode superposition approach for in-seam seismic problems, it is first compared and applied to synthetic finite-difference seismograms of the Love-type which include a complete solution of the wave equation. It becomes obvious that in the case of one and two superposing normal modes, the synthetic Love seam-wave seismograms based on the normal-mode superposition approach agree exactly with the finite-difference data if the travel distance exceeds two dominant wavelengths. Similarly, the application of the one- and two-mode recompression filters to the finite-difference data results in an almost perfect reconstruction of the source wavelet already two dominant wavelengths away from the source.Subsequently, based on the dispersion analysis of an in-seam seismic transmission survey, the normal-mode superposition approach is used both to compute one- and multi-mode synthetic seismograms and to apply one- and multimode recompression filters to the field data. The comparison of the one- and two-mode synthetic seismograms with the in-seam seismic transmission data reveals that arrival times, duration and shape of the wavegroups and their relative excitation strengths could well be modelled by the normal-mode superposition approach. The one-mode recompressions of the transmission seismograms result in non-dispersive wavelets whose temporal resolution and signal-to-noise ratio could clearly be improved. The simultaneous two-mode recompressions of the underground transmission data show that, probably due to band-limitation, the dispersion characteristics of the single modes could not be evaluated sufficiently accurately from the field data in the high-frequency range. Additional techniques which overcome the problem of band-limitation by modelling all of the enclosed single-mode dispersion characteristics up to the Nyquist frequency will be mandatory for future multimode applications.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
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    Unknown
    AGU
    In:  EPIC3AGU Chapman Conference on the Agulhas System and its Role in Changing Ocean Circulation, Climate, and Marine Ecosystems, Stellenbosch, South Africa, 2012-10-08-2012-10-12AGU
    Publication Date: 2019-08-19
    Description: New high-resolution bathymetric and sub-bottom profiler data collected in the Southern Mozambique Channel along a grid of 16 parallel, non-overlapping lines show a large variety of bedforms which were formed by strong bottom currents. They are visually classified into four main microtopographic zones and several sub-zones which divide the study area into regions with (1) smooth seafloor, (2) undulating bedforms, (3) seamounts and islands, and (4) the Zambezi Channel. A smooth seafloor occurs on the Mozambican continental slope together with downslope mass-wasting processes, north and south of Bassas da India, on the eastern levee of the Zambezi Channel and in the Zambezi cone. Undulating bedforms of some kilometres wavelength and several tens of metres height cover most of the southern, central and northeastern study area. The most spectacular bedforms are numerous, closely spaced, giant erosional scours of up to ~450 m depth, more than ~20 km length and ~3 - 7 km width in the southwestern part of the study area. Here, northward flowing Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) is topographically blocked to the north and deflected towards the east due to the shallowing bathymetry of the Mozambique Channel. SW-NE trending undulating bedforms aligned parallel to the deflected AABW and interpreted as small contourite mounds allow to trace the AABW flow path eastwards. An ~100 km long W-E trending channel indicates the northernmost extension of the AABW. NW-SE oriented undulating bedforms in the west, hummocky bedforms in the east and arcuate, cross-cutting features in-between reflect a completely different current regime in the central study area. Comparisons with LADCP sections show, that the western part lies in the range of deep-reaching anticyclonic Mozambique Channel eddies (MCEs), so that the undulating bedforms are again considered to be small contourite mounds aligned parallel to a part of the swirl. The cross-cutting features in the middle mark the eastern boundary of the MCE, where a northbound flow direction prevails. The hummocky bedforms in the east may have developed under the influence of seasonally variable cyclonic East Madagascar Current eddies pretending at least two different flow directions. The origin of arcuate bedforms, sediment ridges and circular or elongate depressions in the northeastern study area is not clear. Bottom currents which interact with the topography of the Bassas da India complex and the Zambezi Channel may contribute to their formation. All morphological features are draped with sediments indicating that the present-day current velocities are not strong enough to erode sediments. This agrees with published LADCP bottom-current velocities of 0.1 m/s. Hence, the microtopography must originate from a time when bottom-current velocities were stronger. Assuming a published sedimentation rate of 20 m/Myrs and a drape of at least 50 m thickness the microtopography may have developed during Pliocene times or earlier.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
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