Affiliation:
1. University of Alberta, Dept. of Physics, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2J1, Canada. Emails:
Abstract
Elastic‐wave velocities are often determined by picking the time of a certain feature of a propagating pulse, such as the first amplitude maximum. However, attenuation and dispersion conspire to change the shape of a propagating wave, making determination of a physically meaningful velocity problematic. As a consequence, the velocities so determined are not necessarily representative of the material’s intrinsic wave phase and group velocities. These phase and group velocities are found experimentally in a highly attenuating medium consisting of glycerol‐saturated, unconsolidated, random packs of glass beads and quartz sand. Our results show that the quality factor Q varies between 2 and 6 over the useful frequency band in these experiments from ∼200 to 600 kHz. The fundamental velocities are compared to more common and simple velocity estimates. In general, the simpler methods estimate the group velocity at the predominant frequency with a 3% discrepancy but are in poor agreement with the corresponding phase velocity. Wave velocities determined from the time at which the pulse is first detected (signal velocity) differ from the predominant group velocity by up to 12%. At best, the onset wave velocity arguably provides a lower bound for the high‐frequency limit of the phase velocity in a material where wave velocity increases with frequency. Each method of time picking, however, is self‐consistent, as indicated by the high quality of linear regressions of observed arrival times versus propagation distance.
Publisher
Society of Exploration Geophysicists
Subject
Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics
Reference24 articles.
1. Aki, K., and Richards, P. G., 1980, Quantitative seismology, theory and practice, 1:W. H. Freeman Co.
2. Bass, J. D., 1995, Elasticity of minerals, glasses, and melts, in Ahrens, T. J., Ed., Mineral physics and crystallography: AGU handbook of physical constants, 2, 45–63.
3. Berryman, J. G., 1995, Mixture theories for rock properties, in Ahrens, T. J., Ed., Mineral physics and crystallography: AGU handbook of physical constants, 2, 205–228.
4. Bourbie, T., Coussy, O., and Zinsner, B., 1987, Acoustics of porous media: Gulf Publ. Co.
5. Velocity dispersion: A tool for characterizing reservoir rocks
Cited by
47 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献