scholarly journals Evaluation of the dynamical characteristics of fluid flow caused by collapse of a non-spherical near-surface bubble

2020 ◽  
Vol 1683 ◽  
pp. 022070
Author(s):  
T C Le ◽  
V I Melikhov ◽  
O I Melikhov ◽  
S E Yakush
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sherif M. Hanafy ◽  
Hussein Hoteit ◽  
Jing Li ◽  
Gerard T. Schuster

AbstractResults are presented for real-time seismic imaging of subsurface fluid flow by parsimonious refraction and surface-wave interferometry. Each subsurface velocity image inverted from time-lapse seismic data only requires several minutes of recording time, which is less than the time-scale of the fluid-induced changes in the rock properties. In this sense this is real-time imaging. The images are P-velocity tomograms inverted from the first-arrival times and the S-velocity tomograms inverted from dispersion curves. Compared to conventional seismic imaging, parsimonious interferometry reduces the recording time and increases the temporal resolution of time-lapse seismic images by more than an order-of-magnitude. In our seismic experiment, we recorded 90 sparse data sets over 4.5 h while injecting 12-tons of water into a sand dune. Results show that the percolation of water is mostly along layered boundaries down to a depth of a few meters, which is consistent with our 3D computational fluid flow simulations and laboratory experiments. The significance of parsimonious interferometry is that it provides more than an order-of-magnitude increase of temporal resolution in time-lapse seismic imaging. We believe that real-time seismic imaging will have important applications for non-destructive characterization in environmental, biomedical, and subsurface imaging.


2002 ◽  
Vol 53 (6) ◽  
pp. 1005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven G. Wilson ◽  
Timothy Pauly ◽  
Mark G. Meekan

Hydroacoustic surveys were used to examine zooplankton distributions in coastal waters off Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia. Surveys were timed to coincide with the seasonal aggregation of whale sharks, Rhincodon typus, and other large zooplanktivores in these waters. The surveys examined scattering features of lagoon/shelf fronts, a series of cross-shelf transects and waters surrounding whale sharks swimming at the surface. These suggested that lagoon waters flow intrusively into shelf waters at reef passages in a layered exchange. Cross-shelf transects identified three vertical scattering layers: a surface bubble layer; a near-surface minimum layer; and a bottom maximum layer. Regions of intense mixing of lagoon and shelf waters were detected seaward and to the north of reef passages. Integrated acoustic mean volume backscatter of the bottom maximum layer increased with depth and distance offshore. Large subsurface aggregations of unidentified fauna were detected beneath whale sharks in the same area that manta rays and surface schools of euphausiids were also observed.


2016 ◽  
Vol 16 (11) ◽  
pp. 4092-4099 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amit Kumar Mandal ◽  
Sudip Misra ◽  
Tamoghna Ojha ◽  
Mihir Kumar Dash ◽  
Mohammad S. Obaidat

2000 ◽  
Vol 107 (5) ◽  
pp. 2922-2922
Author(s):  
Richard S. Keiffer ◽  
Robert A. Zingarelli ◽  
Jorge C. Novarini

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nina Kukowski ◽  
Ronny Stolz ◽  
Theo Scholtes ◽  
Cornelius Schwarze ◽  
Andreas Goepel

<p>The remote location of the Geodynamic Observatory Moxa of Friedrich-Schiller University Jena, about 30 km south of Jena in the Thuringian slate mountains, results in very low ambient noise and thus very good conditions for long-term geophysical observations, which are further improved, as many sensors are installed in the subsurface in galleries or in boreholes.</p><p>So far, the focus of Moxa observatory has been on observing transients signals of deformation and fluid movements in the subsurface. This is accomplished by sensors like a superconducting gravimeter CD-034, three laser strain meters measuring nano-strain along three galleries in north-south, east-west and NW-SE directions, or borehole tiltmeters. Further, information on fluid flow is gained from downhole temperature measurements employing an optical fiber. These sensors are complemented by a climate station and two shallow drill-holes, one of which has been fully cored, which in addition to the temperature times series provide information on water level and rock physical properties. Near surface geophysical profiling using e.g. electrical resistivity tomography has led to a good knowledge of the structurally complex subsurface of the observatory.</p><p>Recently, a node for the Global Network of Optical Magnetometers for Exotic physics (GNOME) has been installed in the temperature-stabilized room at Moxa observatory close to the superconducting gravimeter. The GNOME is a world-spanning collaboration employing optically pumped magneto­meters (OPM) to search for space-time correlated transient signatures heralding exotic physics beyond the Standard Model. GNOME is sensitive to prominent classes of dark-matter scenarios, e.g., axion or axion-like particles forming macroscopic structures in the Universe. The installation in close vicinity to the superconducting gravimeter ensures well-controlled and -monitored ambient conditions such as temperature, air pressure and especially vibrations, allowing improved vetoing of false-positive detection events in the Moxa GNOME node.</p><p>Here, we focus on introducing Moxa Observatory’s sensor systems with an emphasis of actual sensor configurations and further on highlighting how various information on fluid flow coming from the specific sensors lead to an improved understanding of the direction and magnitude of subsurface fluid flow.</p>


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