INTERPRETATION OF MAGNETOTELLURIC RESISTIVITY AND PHASE SOUNDINGS OVER HORIZONTAL LAYERS

Geophysics ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 96-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Patella

The present paper deals with a new inverse method for quantitatively interpreting magnetotelluric apparent resistivity and phase‐lag sounding curves over horizontally stratified earth sections. The recurrent character of the general formula relating the wave impedance of an (n−1)‐layered medium to that of an n‐layered medium suggests the use of the method of reduction to a lower boundary plane, as originally termed by Koefoed in the case of dc resistivity soundings. The layering parameters are so directly derived by a simple iterative procedure. The method is applicable for any number of layers but only when both apparent resistivity and phase‐lag sounding curves are jointly available. Moreover no sophisticated algorithm is required: a simple desk electronic calculator together with a sheet of two‐layer apparent resistivity and phase‐lag master curves are sufficient to reproduce earth sections which, in the range of equivalence, are all consistent with field data.

Geophysics ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 49 (9) ◽  
pp. 1541-1548 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fang‐Wei Yang ◽  
Stanley H. Ward

This paper reports on an investigation of the inversion of borehole normal resistivity data via ridge regression. Interpretation is afforded of individual thin beds and of complicated layered structures. A theoretical solution is given for a layered model containing an arbitrary number of layers in the forward problem. Two forward model results for resistive and conductive thin beds indicate that for high‐resistivity contrasts, the departure between true and apparent resistivity may be more important than the effects caused by the variations in borehole diameter and mud resistivity. Four normal resistivity logs were chosen to test the inversion scheme. Two of the logs were theoretical logs with and without random noise added, and the remaining two were field examples. Theoretical model results and field examples indicate that the inverse method can be used to obtain the resistivity for each layer when the boundary position is known, but it also can be used to obtain the thickness and resistivity for each layer simultaneously.


1960 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 445-454 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. M. Goody

An approximate solution is presented to the problem of the propagation of a temperature wave through a stratified medium which both diffuses and radiates heat. The solution is a combination of two waves whose relative amplitudes vary with the distance from the lower boundary. Apparent diffusivities computed from phase lag and attenuation coefficients can differ greatly from each other and can vary with height even if the actual diffusivity does not.An example, using parameters simulating the earth's atmosphere, suggests that analysis of the propagation of the diurnal wave upward from the earth's surface is likely to be inadequate if radiative effects are not considered.


Geophysics ◽  
1982 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 89-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Kao

Magnetotelluric (MT) response is studied for a vertically inhomogeneous earth, where conductivity (or resistivity) varies exponentially with depth as [Formula: see text]. Horizontal electric and magnetic fields in such an inhomogeneous medium are given in terms of modified Bessel functions. Impedance and apparent resistivity are calculated for (1) an inhomogeneous half‐space having conductivity varying exponentially with depth, (2) an inhomogeneous half‐space overlain by a homogeneous layer, and (3) a three‐layer model with the second layer as an inhomogeneous or transitional layer. Results are presented graphically and are compared with those of homogeneous multilayer models. In the case of resistivity increasing exponentially with depth, the results of the above inhomogeneous models are equivalent to those of Cagniard two‐layer models, with [Formula: see text]. In the case of resistivity decreasing exponentially with depth, the homogeneous multilayer approximation depends upon the number of layers and the layer parameters chosen; |Z/ωμ| as a function of frequency is more useful than the apparent resistivity in determining the values of p and [Formula: see text].


1973 ◽  
Vol 12 (66) ◽  
pp. 375-382
Author(s):  
R. W. Taylor ◽  
R. J. Greenfield

The determination of glacial ice thickness by vertical resistivity depth soundings relies upon the use of theoretical curves which neglect the effect of valley walls. To improve the utility of glacial resistivity measurements an analytical expression is derived for the apparent resistivity determined by a Wenner array oriented parallel to the strike of a layered trough embedded in a perfectly conducting half space. Numerical evaluation of this expression allows the effects of glacial cross-section to be determined. It is shown that the presence of valley walls and layering within the glacier can strongly effect the determination of total ice thickness, and a criterion for the reliable use of plane-layered master curves in the interpretation of field data is established. An apparent resistivity curve calculated for a layered trough is shown to give an excellent fit to field data published by Röthlisberger and Vögtli (1967).


Geophysics ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 689-693 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sri Niwas ◽  
S. K. Upadhyay

Investigations of apparent resistivity due to a point source over an inclined contact have been reported by Aldredge (1937), Unz (1953), Maeda (1955), and Chastenet de Gery and Kunetz (1956). In these investigations either the image or the harmonic method has been utilized. In this note, we propose to solve the same problem as follows: (1) Transform point‐source potential data into line‐source apparent resistivity data. (2) Interpret transformed apparent resistivities by the master curves provided.


Geophysics ◽  
1956 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 477-478
Author(s):  
Bruno Kunz

When J. N. Hummel published his first apparent resistivity curves some 30 years ago, he used coordinates with a linear scale. A short time later it was found that such master curves are universally usable only when plotted on logarithmic scales. The reason for this is that the shape of the curves does not depend upon the absolute electrode spacing and the absolute resistivity values but only on the relative values. This, naturally, also holds true for the examples shown by A. R. Clark. The curves as shown by him reveal a resistivity ratio of [Formula: see text]. In the same way, the “Distance as a fraction of the Semimajor Axis” is a quotient. Both coordinates should therefore be presented in a logarithmic scale. When so plotted, the characteristic properties of the curves are much more conspciuous and are very different from those when linear scales are used. The remarks made by the author relative to the shape of the curves may have to be revised.


Perception ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 679-681 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Piggins

Moiré patterns in depth are reported when spatially periodic stimuli are viewed stereoscopically. Near-vertical square-wave gratings with horizontal disparity effected by orientation difference produce a ‘venetian blind’ effect. A single grating is observed divided into horizontal layers, the number of layers being a direct function of orientation difference. Lines within each layer are slanted with respect to the frontoparallel plane, becoming more so with increasing orientation difference. Subjects with stereo deficits report a decreased effect. Quantitative reports implicate stereoscopic mechanisms responsible for this unique, internal preservation of moiré patterns.


Geophysics ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 49 (9) ◽  
pp. 1517-1533 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip E. Wannamaker ◽  
Gerald W. Hohmann ◽  
Stanley H. Ward

The electromagnetic fields scattered by a three‐dimensional (3-D) inhomogeneity in the earth are affected strongly by boundary charges. Boundary charges cause normalized electric field magnitudes, and thus tensor magnetotelluric (MT) apparent resistivities, to remain anomalous as frequency approaches zero. However, these E‐field distortions below certain frequencies are essentially in‐phase with the incident electric field. Moreover, normalized secondary magnetic field amplitudes over a body ultimately decline in proportion to the plane‐wave impedance of the layered host. It follows that tipper element magnitudes and all MT function phases become minimally affected at low frequencies by an inhomogeneity. Resistivity structure in nature is a collection of inhomogeneities of various scales, and the small structures in this collection can have MT responses as strong locally as those of the large structures. Hence, any telluric distortion in overlying small‐scale extraneous structure can be superimposed to arbitrarily low frequencies upon the apparent resistivities of buried targets. On the other hand, the MT responses of small and large bodies have frequency dependencies that are separated approximately as the square of the geometric scale factor distinguishing the different bodies. Therefore, tipper element magnitudes as well as the phases of all MT functions due to small‐scale extraneous structure will be limited to high frequencies, so that one may “see through” such structure with these functions to target responses occurring at lower frequencies. About a 3-D conductive body near the surface, interpretation using 1-D or 2-D TE modeling routines of the apparent resistivity and impedance phase identified as transverse electric (TE) can imply false low resistivities at depth. This is because these routines do not account for the effects of boundary charges. Furthermore, 3-D bodies in typical layered hosts, with layer resistivities that increase with depth in the upper several kilometers, are even less amenable to 2-D TE interpretation than are similar 3-D bodies in uniform half‐spaces. However, centrally located profiles across geometrically regular, elongate 3-D prisms may be modeled accurately with a 2-D transverse magnetic (TM) algorithm, which implicitly includes boundary charges in its formulation. In defining apparent resistivity and impedance phase for TM modeling of such bodies, we recommend a fixed coordinate system derived using tipper‐strike, calculated at the frequency for which tipper magnitude due to the inhomogeneity of interest is large relative to that due to any nearby extraneous structure.


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (11) ◽  
pp. 1877
Author(s):  
Piran Goudarzi ◽  
Awatef Abidi ◽  
Seyed Abdollah Mansouri Mehryan ◽  
Mohammad Ghalambaz ◽  
Mikhail A. Sheremet

In this work, the relaxation parameter (τ) and fractionality order (α) in the fractional single phase lag (FSPL) non-Fourier heat conduction model are estimated by employing the conjugate gradient inverse method (CGIM). Two different physics of skin tissue are chosen as the studied cases; single and three-layer skin tissues. Single-layer skin is exposed to laser radiation having the constant heat flux of Qin. However, a heat pulse with constant temperature is imposed on the three-layer skin. The required inputs for the inverse problem in the fractional diffusion equation are chosen from the outcomes of the dual phase lag (DPL) theory. The governing equations are solved numerically by utilizing implicit approaches. The results of this study showed the efficiency of the CGIM to estimate the unknown parameters in the FSPL model. In fact, obtained numerical results of the CGIM are in excellent compatibility with the FSPL model.


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