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Full seismic waveform tomography for upper-mantle structure in the Australasian region using adjoint methods

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In this paper, the authors present a full seismic waveform tomography for upper-mantle structure in the Australasian region, based on spectral-element simulations of seismic wave propagation in 3-D heterogeneous earth models.
Abstract
SUMMARY We present a full seismic waveform tomography for upper-mantle structure in the Australasian region. Our method is based on spectral-element simulations of seismic wave propagation in 3-D heterogeneous earth models. The accurate solution of the forward problem ensures that waveform misfits are solely due to as yet undiscovered Earth structure and imprecise source descriptions, thus leading to more realistic tomographic images and source parameter estimates. To reduce the computational costs, we implement a long-wavelength equivalent crustal model. We quantify differences between the observed and the synthetic waveforms using time–frequency (TF) misfits. Their principal advantages are the separation of phase and amplitude misfits, the exploitation of complete waveform information and a quasi-linear relation to 3-D Earth structure. Fr´ echet kernels for the TF misfits are computed via the adjoint method. We propose a simple data compression scheme and an accuracy-adaptive time integration of the wavefields that allows us to reduce the storage requirements of the adjoint method by almost two orders of magnitude. To minimize the waveform phase misfit, we implement a pre-conditioned conjugate gradient algorithm. Amplitude information is incorporated indirectly by a restricted line search. This ensures that the cumulative envelope misfit does not increase during the inversion. An efficient pre-conditioner is found empirically through numerical experiments. It prevents the concentration of structural heterogeneity near the sources and receivers. We apply our waveform tomographic method to ≈1000 high-quality vertical-component seismograms, recorded in the Australasian region between 1993 and 2008. The waveforms comprise fundamental- and higher-mode surface and long-period S body waves in the period range from 50 to 200 s. To improve the convergence of the algorithm, we implement a 3-D initial model that contains the long-wavelength features of the Australasian region. Resolution tests indicate that our algorithm converges after around 10 iterations and that both long- and short-wavelength features in the uppermost mantle are well resolved. There is evidence for effects related to the non-linearity in the inversion procedure. After 11 iterations we fit the data waveforms acceptably well; with no significant further improvements to be expected. During the inversion the total fitted seismogram length increases by 46 per cent, providing a clear indication of the efficiency and consistency of the iterative optimization algorithm. The resulting SV -wave velocity model reveals structural features of the Australasian upper mantle with great detail. We confirm the existence of a pronounced low-velocity band along the eastern margin of the continent that can be clearly distinguished against Precambrian Australia and the microcontinental Lord Howe Rise. The transition from Precambrian to Phanerozoic Australia (the Tasman Line) appears to be sharp down to at least 200 km depth. It mostly occurs further east of where it is inferred from gravity and magnetic anomalies. Also clearly visible are the Archean and Proterozoic cratons, the northward continuation of the continent and anomalously low S-wave velocities in the upper mantle in central Australia.

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Journal ArticleDOI

S40RTS: A degree-40 shear-velocity model for the mantle from new Rayleigh wave dispersion, teleseismic traveltime and normal-mode splitting function measurements

TL;DR: In this paper, a new collection of Rayleigh wave phase velocity, teleseismic body-wave traveltime and normal-mode splitting function measurements are used for modeling shear-velocity variation in Earth's mantle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global shear speed structure of the upper mantle and transition zone

TL;DR: The SL2013sv model as discussed by the authors is constrained by an unprecedentedly large set of waveform fits (∼3/4 of a million broad-band seismograms), computed in seismogram-dependent frequency bands, up to a maximum period range of 11-450 s. The model is parametrized on a triangular grid with a ∼280 km spacing.
Book

Full Seismic Waveform Modelling and Inversion

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a numerical solution of the Elastic Wave Equation and computing sensitivity kernel for full waveform tomography for upper-mantle structure in Australasian Region.
Journal ArticleDOI

Misfit functions for full waveform inversion based on instantaneous phase and envelope measurements

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed new misfit functions for full waveform tomography based on instantaneous phase differences and envelope ratios between observed and synthetic seismograms, which can reduce non-linear behavior of waveforms due to interaction of phase and amplitude information.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seismic tomography of the southern California crust based on spectral‐element and adjoint methods

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors iteratively improve a 3D tomographic model of the southern California crust using numerical simulations of seismic wave propagation based on a spectral element method (SEM) in combination with an adjoint method.
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TL;DR: In this article, a horizontally layered inhomogeneous medium is considered, whose properties are constant or nearly so when averaged over some vertical height l′, and conditions on the five elastic coefficients of a homogeneous transversely isotropic medium are derived which are necessary and sufficient for the medium to be "long-wave equivalent" to a horizontally-layered inhomogenous medium.
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