THE GLOBAL SHORT-PERIOD WAVEFIELD MODELLED WITH A MONTE CARLO SEISMIC PHONON METHOD

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dc.contributor.author Shearer P.M.
dc.contributor.author Earle P.S.
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-01T05:54:59Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-01T05:54:59Z
dc.date.issued 2004
dc.identifier https://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=13672114
dc.identifier.citation Geophysical Journal International, 2004, 158, 3, 1103-1117
dc.identifier.issn 0956-540X
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/38868
dc.description.abstract At high frequencies (∼1 Hz), much of the seismic energy arriving at teleseismic distances is not found in the main phases (e.g. P, PP, S, etc.) but is contained in the extended coda that follows these arrivals. This coda results from scattering off small-scale velocity and density perturbations within the crust and mantle and contains valuable information regarding the depth dependence and strength of this heterogeneity as well as the relative importance of intrinsic versus scattering attenuation. Most analyses of seismic coda to date have concentrated on S-wave coda generated from lithospheric scattering for events recorded at local and regional distances. Here, we examine the globally averaged vertical-component, 1-Hz wavefield (>10 ◦ range) for earthquakes recorded in the IRIS FARM archive from 1990 to 1999. We apply an envelopefunction stacking technique to image the average time‐distance behavior of the wavefield for both shallow (≤50 km) and deep (≥500 km) earthquakes. Unlike regional records, our images are dominated by P and P coda owing to the large effect of attenuation on PP and S at high frequencies. Modelling our results is complicated by the need to include a variety of ray paths, the likely contributions of multiple scattering and the possible importance of P-to-S and S-to-P scattering. We adopt a stochastic, particle-based approach in which millions of seismic phonons are randomly sprayed from the source and tracked through the Earth. Each phonon represents an energy packet that travels along the appropriate ray path until it is affected by a discontinuity or a scatterer. Discontinuities are modelled by treating the energy normalized reflection and transmission coefficients as probabilities. Scattering probabilities and scattering angles are computed in a similar fashion, assuming random velocity and density perturbations characterized by an exponential autocorrelation function. Intrinsic attenuation is included by reducing the energy contained in each particle as an appropriate function of traveltime. We find that most scattering occurs in the lithosphere and upper mantle, as previous results have indicated, but that some lower-mantle scattering is likely also required. A model with 3 to 4 per cent rms velocity heterogeneity at 4-km scale length in the upper mantle and 0.5 per cent rms velocity heterogeneity at 8-km scale length in the lower mantle (with intrinsic attenuation of Q α = 450 above 200 km depth and Q α = 2500 below 200 km) provides a reasonable fit to both the shallow- and deep-earthquake observations, although many trade-offs exist between the scale length, depth extent and strength of the heterogeneity.
dc.subject scattering
dc.subject seismic coda
dc.subject seismic wave propagation
dc.title THE GLOBAL SHORT-PERIOD WAVEFIELD MODELLED WITH A MONTE CARLO SEISMIC PHONON METHOD
dc.type Статья


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