scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

About the influence of pre‐stress upon adiabatic perturbations of the Earth

TLDR
In this article, the influence of the state of stress in the equilibrium configuration of the Earth (i.e. the pre-stress) upon its adiabatic perturbations is examined.
Abstract
Summary. In this paper we examine the influence of the state of stress in the equilibrium configuration of the Earth (i.e. the pre-stress) upon its adiabatic perturbations. The equations governing these perturbations to the first order (Woodhouse & Dahlen; Dahlen) are re-derived using a Lagrangian approach. Different expressions of the sesquilinear form associated to the elastic-gravitational operator are given. One of these provides a way to extend to hydrostatically pre-stressed solids the criterion of local stability given by Friedman & Schutz for uniformly rotating fluids. Then the propagation in the Earth of seismic wavefronts is considered. It is shown that the nature of these different wavefronts is entirely determined by the quadratic coefficients of the development of the specific internal energy variation, corresponding to isentropic evolution, with respect to the Lagrangian finite deformation tensor. Expressions for the velocities of the various waves are given as functions of incidence angle and pre-stress for orthotropic elastic material. In the particular case where the elastic parameters depend only on one coordinate of a curvilinear system and the axis of orthotropy of the material coincides with the corresponding natural base vector, the elastodynamic equations are reduced to a simple system for a displacement stress vector, using surface operators. In particular for spherical geometry, equations are obtained which generalize to orthotropic pre-stress those given by Alterman et al. and Takeuchi & Saito.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Spectral-element simulations of global seismic wave propagation: II. Three-dimensional models, oceans, rotation and self-gravitation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors simulate global seismic wave propagation based upon a spectral-element method, including the full complexity of 3D Earth models, i.e. lateral variations in compressional-wave velocity, shear wave velocity and density, a 3D crustal model, ellipticity, as well as topography and bathymetry.
Journal ArticleDOI

How to reconcile body-wave and normal-mode reference earth models

TL;DR: In this article, the body-wave and normal-mode approaches can be reconciled by including in the inversion procedure the density and the three anisotropic parameters, i.e., the density p, the quality factor Q, and the anisotropy parameters 5, (b and q).
Book ChapterDOI

Spectral Element Analysis in Seismology

TL;DR: A review of the application of the spectral-element method to regional and global seismology and the capabilities of the method and its interest in the context of the computation of three-dimensional synthetic seismograms are presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solving elastodynamics in a fluid-solid heterogeneous sphere: a parallel spectral element approximation on non-conforming grids

TL;DR: In this paper, a spectral element approach for modeling elastic wave propagation in a solid-fluid sphere where the local effects of gravity are taken into account is presented, where the equations are discretized in terms of the displacement in the solid and the velocity potential in a neutrally stratified fluid.
Book ChapterDOI

The spectral-element method in seismology

TL;DR: The spectral-element method, which is well suited for numerical calculations of synthetic seismograms for three-dimensional Earth models, is presented, which uses a fluid-solid coupling formulation that does not require iterations at the core-mantle or inner-core boundaries.
References
More filters
Book

Introduction to the mechanics of a continuous medium

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a linearized theory of elasticity for tensors, which they call Linearized Theory of Elasticity (LTHE), which is based on tensors and elasticity.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Application of Normal Mode Theory to the Retrieval of Structural Parameters and Source Mechanisms from Seismic Spectra

TL;DR: In this paper, the elastic-gravitational free oscillations of the Earth are used to derive procedures for resolving nearly degenerate multiplets of normal modes of an earthquake point source.
Journal ArticleDOI

Numerical Applications of a Formalism for Geophysical Inverse Problems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors prove that the collection of Earth models which yield the physically observed values of any independent set of gross Earth data is either empty or infinite dimensional, and exploit this very high degree of non-uniqueness in real geophysical inverse problems to generate computer programs which iteratively produce Earth models to fit given gross earth data and satisfy other criteria.
Related Papers (5)