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  • Seismological Society of America (SSA)  (2)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2015-06-09
    Description: We present an improved method for estimating the frequency-dependent phase velocity of ambient noise cross spectra by waveform fitting of Aki’s formula ( Aki, 1957 ). The key part of the procedure is the use of a grid search to generate an initial estimate of the phase velocity that matches the observed cross spectrum without any cycle slips. A generalized least-squares procedure is then used to refine this initial estimate. The grid search has only three frequency nodes, at the left end, center, and right end of the frequency band of interest, but parameterizes velocity finely, with 40 increments at each of these nodes. Trial phase velocity curves are generated by linear interpolation between nodes, and the curve that best predicts the observed cross spectrum is chosen as the initial estimate. The generalized least-squares refinement implements two types of prior information: the phase velocity is close to a smoothed version of the initial estimate, and the phase velocity varies smoothly with frequency. In addition to estimating the frequency-dependent phase velocity function, the method provides its variance and resolution. The method is robust to low signal-to-noise levels and so may prove especially attractive in cases in which short array-deployment times limit the quality of cross-spectral estimates. It also provides useful estimates at short interstation distance, when the cross spectrum has few zero crossings.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2015-04-01
    Description: We investigate whether 2D anisotropic travel-time tomography can uniquely determine both the spatially varying isotropic and anisotropic components of the seismic velocity field. This issue was first studied by Mochizuki (1997) for the special case of Radon’s problem (tomography with infinitely long rays), who found it to be nonunique. Our analysis extends this result to all array geometries and demonstrates that all such tomographic inversions are nonunique. Any travel-time dataset can be fit by a model that is either purely isotropic, purely anisotropic, or some combination of the two. However, a pair of purely isotropic and purely anisotropic velocity models that predict the same travel times are very different in other respects, including spatial scale. Thus, prior information can be used to select among equivalent solutions to achieve a unique solution embodying a given set of prior expectations about model properties. We extend the notion of a resolution test, used in traditional isotropic tomography, to the anisotropic case. Our equivalent heterogeneity analysis focuses on the anisotropic heterogeneity equivalent to a point isotropic heterogeneity, and vice versa. We demonstrate that it provides insights into the structure of an anisotropic tomography problem that facilitates both the selection of appropriate prior information and the interpretation of results. We recommend that it be routinely applied to all surface-wave inversions where the presence of anisotropy is suspected, including those based on noise correlation.
    Print ISSN: 0037-1106
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-3573
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Location Call Number Expected Availability
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