P- and S-wave velocity model along crustal scale refraction and wide-angle reflection profile in the southern Korean peninsula

2013 ◽  
Vol 582 ◽  
pp. 84-100 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyun-Moo Cho ◽  
Chang-Eob Baag ◽  
Jung Mo Lee ◽  
Wooil M. Moon ◽  
Heeok Jung ◽  
...  
2017 ◽  
Vol 122 (8) ◽  
pp. 6703-6720 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xingchen Wang ◽  
Yonghua Li ◽  
Zhifeng Ding ◽  
Lupei Zhu ◽  
Chunyong Wang ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. M56-2020-19
Author(s):  
E. R. Ivins ◽  
W. van der Wal ◽  
D. A. Wiens ◽  
A. J. Lloyd ◽  
L. Caron

AbstractThe Antarctic mantle and lithosphere are known to have large lateral contrasts in seismic velocity and tectonic history. These contrasts suggest differences in the response time scale of mantle flow across the continent, similar to those documented between the northeastern and southwestern upper mantle of North America. Glacial isostatic adjustment and geodynamical modeling rely on independent estimates of lateral variability in effective viscosity. Recent improvements in imaging techniques and the distribution of seismic stations now allow resolution of both lateral and vertical variability of seismic velocity, making detailed inferences about lateral viscosity variations possible. Geodetic and paleo sea-level investigations of Antarctica provide quantitative ways of independently assessing the three-dimensional mantle viscosity structure. While observational and causal connections between inferred lateral viscosity variability and seismic velocity changes are qualitatively reconciled, significant improvements in the quantitative relations between effective viscosity anomalies and those imaged by P- and S-wave tomography have remained elusive. Here we describe several methods for estimating effective viscosity from S-wave velocity. We then present and compare maps of the viscosity variability beneath Antarctica based on the recent S-wave velocity model ANT-20 using three different approaches.


2019 ◽  
Vol 92 ◽  
pp. 18006
Author(s):  
Yannick Choy Hing Ng ◽  
William Danovan ◽  
Taeseo Ku

Seismic cross-hole tomography has been commonly used in oil and gas exploration and the mining industry for the detection of precious resources. For near-surface geotechnical site investigation, this geophysical method is relatively new and can be used to supplement traditional methods such as the standard penetration test, coring and sampling, thus improving the effectiveness of site characterization. This paper presents a case study which was carried out on a reclaimed land in the Eastern region of Singapore. A seismic cross-hole test was performed by generating both compressional waves and shear waves into the ground. The signals were interpreted by using first-arrival travel time wave tomography and the arrival times were subsequently inverted using Simultaneous Iterative Reconstruction Technique (SIRT). A comparison with the borehole logging data indicated that P-wave velocity model cannot provide sufficient information about the soil layers, especially when the ground water table is near the surface. The S-wave velocity model seemed to agree quite well with the variation in the SPT-N value and could identify to a certain extent the interface between the different soil layers. Finally, P-wave and S-wave velocities are used to compute the Poisson's ratio distribution which gave a good indication of the degree of saturation of the soil.


Geophysics ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-45
Author(s):  
Jarrod C. Dunne ◽  
Greg Beresford ◽  
Brian L. N Kennett

We developed guidelines for building a detailed elastic depth model by using an elastic synthetic seismogram that matched both prestack and stacked marine seismic data from the Gippsland Basin (Australia). Recomputing this synthetic for systematic variations upon the depth model provided insight into how each part of the model affected the synthetic. This led to the identification of parameters in the depth model that have only a minor influence upon the synthetic and suggested methods for estimating the parameters that are important. The depth coverage of the logging run is of prime importance because highly reflective layering in the overburden can generate noise events that interfere with deeper events. A depth sampling interval of 1 m for the P-wave velocity model is a useful lower limit for modeling the transmission response and thus maintaining accuracy in the tie over a large time interval. The sea‐floor model has a strong influence on mode conversion and surface multiples and can be built using a checkshot survey or by testing different trend curves. When an S-wave velocity log is unavailable, it can be replaced using the P-wave velocity model and estimates of the Poisson ratio for each significant geological formation. Missing densities can be replaced using Gardner’s equation, although separate substitutions are required for layers known to have exceptionally high or low densities. Linear events in the elastic synthetic are sensitive to the choice of inelastic attenuation values in the water layer and sea‐floor sediments, while a simple inelastic attenuation model for the consolidated sediments is often adequate. The usefulness of a 1-D depth model is limited by misties resulting from complex 3-D structures and the validity of the measurements obtained in the logging run. The importance of such mis‐ties can be judged, and allowed for in an interpretation, by recomputing the elastic synthetic after perturbing the depth model to simulate the key uncertainties. Taking the next step beyond using simplistic modeling techniques requires extra effort to achieve a satisfactory tie to each part of a prestack seismic record. This is rewarded by the greater confidence that can then be held in the stacked synthetic tie and applications such as noise identification, data processing benchmarking, AVO analysis, and inversion.


Geophysics ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 77 (4) ◽  
pp. R149-R159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinfa Zhu ◽  
George A. McMechan

Near- and postcritical (wide-angle) reflections provide the potential for velocity and density inversion because of their large amplitudes and phase-shifted waveforms. We tested using phase variation with angle (PVA) data in addition to, or instead of, amplitude variation with angle (AVA) data for elastic inversion. Accurate PVA test data were generated using the reflectivity method. Two other forward modeling methods were also investigated, including plane-wave and spherical-wave reflection coefficients. For a two half-space model, linearized least squares was used to invert PVA and AVA data for the P-wave velocity, S-wave velocity, and the density of the lower space and the S-wave velocity of the upper space. Inversion tests showed the feasibility and robustness of PVA inversion. A reverse-time migration test demonstrated better preservation of PVA information than AVA information during wavefield propagation through a layered overburden. Phases of deeper reflections were less affected than amplitudes by the transmission losses, which makes the results of PVA inversion more accurate than AVA inversion in multilayered media. PVA brings useful information to the elastic inversion of wide-angle reflections.


Geophysics ◽  
2020 ◽  
pp. 1-79
Author(s):  
Can Oren ◽  
Jeffrey Shragge

Accurately estimating event locations is of significant importance in microseismic investigations because this information greatly contributes to the overall success of hydraulic fracturing monitoring programs. Full-wavefield time-reverse imaging (TRI) using one or more wave-equation imaging conditions offers an effective methodology for locating surface-recorded microseismic events. To be most beneficial in microseismic monitoring programs, though, the TRI procedure requires using accurate subsurface models that account for elastic media effects. We develop a novel microseismic (extended) PS energy imaging condition that explicitly incorporates the stiffness tensor and exhibits heightened sensitivity to isotropic elastic model perturbations compared to existing imaging conditions. Numerical experiments demonstrate the sensitivity of microseismic TRI results to perturbations in P- and S-wave velocity models. Zero-lag and extended microseismic source images computed at selected subsurface locations yields useful information about 3D P- and S-wave velocity model accuracy. Thus, we assert that these image volumes potentially can serve as the input into microseismic elastic velocity model building algorithms.


Geophysics ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-145
Author(s):  
Zhiming Ren ◽  
Qianzong Bao ◽  
Bingluo Gu

Full waveform inversion (FWI) suffers from the local minima problem and requires a sufficiently accurate starting model to converge to the correct solution. Wave-equation traveltime inversion (WETI) is an effective tool to retrieve the long-wavelength components of the velocity model. We develop a joint diving/direct and reflected wave WETI (JDRWETI) method to build the P- and S-wave velocity macromodels. We estimate the traveltime shifts of seismic events (diving/direct waves, PP and PS reflections) through the dynamic warping scheme and construct a misfit function using both the time shifts of diving/direct and reflected waves. We derive the adjoint wave equations and the gradients with respect to the background models based on the joint misfit function. We apply the kernel decomposition scheme to extract the kernel of the diving/direct wave and the tomography kernels of PP and PS reflections. For an explosive source, the kernels of diving/direct wave and PP reflections and the kernel of PS reflections are used to compute the P- and S-wave gradients of the background models, respectively. We implement JDRWETI by a two-stage inversion workflow: first invert the P- and S-wave velocity models using the P-wave gradients and then improve the S-wave velocity model using the S-wave gradients. Numerical tests on synthetic and field datasets reveal that the JDRWETI method successfully recovers the long-wavelength components of P- and S-wave velocity models, which can be used for an initial model for the subsequent elastic FWI. Moreover, the proposed JDRWETI method prevails over the existing reflection WETI method and the cascaded diving/direct and reflected wave WETI method, especially when large velocity errors are present in the shallow part of the starting models. The JDRWETI method with the two-stage inversion workflow can give rise to reasonable inversion results even for the model with different P- and S-wave velocity structures.


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