Mapping surface wave dispersion uncertainty in Vs Profiles to VS,30 and site response analysis

2020 ◽  
Vol 138 ◽  
pp. 106298
Author(s):  
Narayan Roy ◽  
Ravi S. Jakka
Author(s):  
Chaim J. Poran ◽  
Jorge A. Rodriguez-Ordoñez ◽  
Takenori Satoh ◽  
Roy Borden

Noninvasive shear wave velocity (SWV) profiling of soil deposits has long been recognized as a cost-effective approach to obtain SWV data essential for seismic response analysis including site amplification and liquefaction. The controlled-source measurement of surface wave dispersion (CXW) is a relatively new noninvasive method that is used for site characterization in the United States, Japan, and other countries. The CXW method uses harmonic-controlled sources to produce steady state Rayleigh waves in order to measure the dispersion characteristics of soil and rock. Several interpretation techniques may be used to obtain SWV structure from Rayleigh wave dispersion data (in a process that is referred to as the Vf-VS method). CXW measurement data from more than 200 soil and rock sites were analyzed. These results were used to formulate a new approach for the Vf-VS interpretation method based on the new concept of reference profiles that describes the average dispersion curve and SWV structure. The reference profile is based on SWV dependency on confining pressure (depth) in soils. Simple equations were developed for direct inversion of the reference profile. The new procedure is completed by considering the effects of single layers with properties that are different from the reference profile. This new interpretation procedure is rapid and computationally efficient, and its results are more representative of actual soil structure than results obtained from other noninvasive methods. This study indicates inversion that is based on surface waves dispersion can provide a good estimate of average SWV variation.


2014 ◽  
Vol 33 (12) ◽  
pp. 1378-1384 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael E. Kalinski ◽  
Melinda Jean-Louis ◽  
Herby Lissade

2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffry L. Stevens ◽  
David A. Adams ◽  
G. E. Baker ◽  
Mariana G. Eneva ◽  
Heming Xu

2020 ◽  
Vol 222 (3) ◽  
pp. 1639-1655
Author(s):  
Xin Zhang ◽  
Corinna Roy ◽  
Andrew Curtis ◽  
Andy Nowacki ◽  
Brian Baptie

SUMMARY Seismic body wave traveltime tomography and surface wave dispersion tomography have been used widely to characterize earthquakes and to study the subsurface structure of the Earth. Since these types of problem are often significantly non-linear and have non-unique solutions, Markov chain Monte Carlo methods have been used to find probabilistic solutions. Body and surface wave data are usually inverted separately to produce independent velocity models. However, body wave tomography is generally sensitive to structure around the subvolume in which earthquakes occur and produces limited resolution in the shallower Earth, whereas surface wave tomography is often sensitive to shallower structure. To better estimate subsurface properties, we therefore jointly invert for the seismic velocity structure and earthquake locations using body and surface wave data simultaneously. We apply the new joint inversion method to a mining site in the United Kingdom at which induced seismicity occurred and was recorded on a small local network of stations, and where ambient noise recordings are available from the same stations. The ambient noise is processed to obtain inter-receiver surface wave dispersion measurements which are inverted jointly with body wave arrival times from local earthquakes. The results show that by using both types of data, the earthquake source parameters and the velocity structure can be better constrained than in independent inversions. To further understand and interpret the results, we conduct synthetic tests to compare the results from body wave inversion and joint inversion. The results show that trade-offs between source parameters and velocities appear to bias results if only body wave data are used, but this issue is largely resolved by using the joint inversion method. Thus the use of ambient seismic noise and our fully non-linear inversion provides a valuable, improved method to image the subsurface velocity and seismicity.


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