STATISTICS OF TRAVELTIMES AND AMPLITUDES IN RANDOM MEDIA

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dc.contributor.author Baig A.M.
dc.contributor.author Dahlen F.A.
dc.date.accessioned 2022-09-23T00:35:28Z
dc.date.available 2022-09-23T00:35:28Z
dc.date.issued 2004
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=6638740
dc.identifier.citation Geophysical Journal International, 2004, 158, 1, 187-210
dc.identifier.issn 0956-540X
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/38725
dc.description.abstract In this study, we build on the results of the study of 3-D wave propagation in weakly heterogeneous media conducted by Baig et al. We measure traveltimes and amplitudes from 'ground-truth' seismograms, computed using a numerical wave propagation code, and compare the measurements with approximate finite-frequency and ray-theoretical values for these quantities. Ray-theoretical traveltimes become invalid whenever the scale length of the 3-D heterogeneity is smaller than half the maximum width of the Fresnel zone; in contrast, ray-theoretical amplitudes have a much more restricted range of validity: the scale length should not be less than one Fresnel-zone maximum width. Finite-frequency theory gives better results for amplitudes, suffering no observable degradation for small-scale media for the weakest heterogeneity considered, but suffering appreciable misfit in more strongly heterogeneous media. Using these finite-frequency expressions for traveltime, we derive expressions for the expected variances of traveltimes and amplitudes that act, in most cases, as extensions to the ray-theoretical expressions. Finally, we propose using the amplitude variance as a criterion for delineating the validity of these linear approximations. For traveltimes, provided that one rejects waveforms that do not yield a good cross-correlation traveltime, the remaining data are linearly related to the model over the values of theoretical amplitude variance that we probe in this experiment. Amplitudes do not behave as well: when the theoretical amplitude variance rises above 0.1, significant non-linearities start to invalidate our linear approximation.
dc.subject BODY WAVES
dc.subject DIFFRACTION
dc.subject INHOMOGENEOUS MEDIA
dc.subject RAY THEORY
dc.subject TRAVELTIME
dc.subject WAVE PROPAGATION
dc.title STATISTICS OF TRAVELTIMES AND AMPLITUDES IN RANDOM MEDIA
dc.type Статья


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