Comparison of straight-ray and curved-ray surface wave tomography approaches in near-surface studies
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Published:2022-10-21
Issue:10
Volume:13
Page:1569-1583
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ISSN:1869-9529
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Container-title:Solid Earth
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Solid Earth
Author:
Karimpour Mohammadkarim, Slob EvertORCID, Socco Laura ValentinaORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Surface waves are widely used to model shear-wave
velocity of the subsurface. Surface wave tomography (SWT) has recently
gained popularity for near-surface studies. Some researchers have used
straight-ray SWT in which it is assumed that surface waves propagate along
the straight line between receiver pairs. Alternatively, curved-ray SWT can
be employed by computing the paths between the receiver pairs using a
ray-tracing algorithm. The SWT is a well-established method in seismology and
has been employed in numerous seismological studies. However, it is
important to make a comparison between these two SWT approaches for
near-surface applications since the amount of information and the level of
complexity in near-surface applications are different from seismological studies. We
apply straight-ray and curved-ray SWT to four near-surface examples and
compare the results in terms of the quality of the final model and the
computational cost. In three examples we optimise the shot positions to
obtain an acquisition layout which can produce high coverage of dispersion
curves. In the other example, the data have been acquired using a typical
seismic exploration 3D acquisition scheme. We show that if the source
positions are optimised, the straight-ray can produce S-wave velocity models
similar to the curved-ray SWT but with lower computational cost than the
curved-ray approach. Otherwise, the improvement of inversion results from
curved-ray SWT can be significant.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Paleontology,Stratigraphy,Earth-Surface Processes,Geochemistry and Petrology,Geology,Geophysics,Soil Science
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