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Journal ArticleDOI

1.5D inversion of lateral variation of Scholte-wave dispersion

Thomas Bohlen, +3 more
- 01 Apr 2004 - 
- Vol. 69, Iss: 2, pp 330-344
TLDR
In this paper, Scholte waves are recorded in a common receiver gather generated by an air gun towed behind a ship away from a single stationary ocean-bottom seismometer, and a 2D shear-wave velocity section is generated.
Abstract
Reliable models of in-situ shear-wave velocities of shallow-water marine sediments are important for geotechnical applications, lithological sediment characterization, and seismic exploration studies. We infer the 2D shear-wave velocity structure of shallow-water marine sediments from the lateral variation of Scholte-wave dispersion. Scholte waves are recorded in a common receiver gather generated by an air gun towed behind a ship away from a single stationary ocean-bottom seismometer. An offset window moves along the common receiver gather to pick up a local wavefield. A slant stack produces a slowness-frequency spectrum of the local wavefield, which contains all modes excited by the air gun. Amplitude maxima (dispersion curves) in the local spectrum are picked and inverted for the shear-wave velocity depth profile located at the center of the window. As the window continuously moves along the common receiver gather, a 2D shear-wave velocity section is generated. In a synthetic example the smooth lateral variation of surficial shear-wave velocity is well reconstructed. The method is applied to two orthogonal common receiver gathers acquired in the Baltic Sea (northern Germany). The inverted 2D models show a strong vertical gradient of shear-wave velocity at the sea floor. Along one profile significant lateral variation near the sea floor is observed.

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Citations
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Application of Surface-Wave Methods for Seismic Site Characterization

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Structure of young East Pacific Rise lithosphere from ambient noise correlation analysis of fundamental- and higher-mode Scholte-Rayleigh waves

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors recover inter-station surface (Scholte-Rayleigh) wave empirical Green's function (EGF) of both the fundamental and the first-higher mode using one year of continuous seismic noise records on the vertical component from 28 ocean bottom seismographs deployed in the Quebrada/Discovery/Gofar transform faults region on the East Pacific Rise.
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Dominant Higher Surface-wave Modes and Possible Inversion Pitfalls

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a Gibson half-space model to estimate the phase velocities of surface waves at low (20 Hz) to high (60 Hz) frequencies and more than once over the recorded bandwidth.
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Laterally constrained inversion of ground roll from seismic reflection records

TL;DR: In this article, a Monte Carlo global search inversion algorithm is used to obtain a pseudo-2D model of the shear-wave velocity in a moving spatial window, which is then inverted using a deterministic, laterally constrained inversion.
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