scholarly journals Three-dimensional shear wave velocity imaging by ambient seismic noise tomography

2012 ◽  
Vol 189 (1) ◽  
pp. 501-512 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Pilz ◽  
Stefano Parolai ◽  
Matteo Picozzi ◽  
Dino Bindi
2019 ◽  
Vol 124 (2) ◽  
pp. 1601-1625 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul M. Bremner ◽  
Mark P. Panning ◽  
R. M. Russo ◽  
Victor Mocanu ◽  
A. Christian Stanciu ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
J Salomón ◽  
C Pastén ◽  
S Ruiz ◽  
F Leyton ◽  
M Sáez ◽  
...  

Summary The seismic response of the Santiago City, the capital of Chile with more than 5.5 million inhabitants, is controlled by the properties of the shallower quaternary deposits and the impedance contrast with the underlying Abanico formation, among other factors. In this study, we process continuous records of ambient seismic noise to perform an ambient seismic noise tomography with the aim of defining the shallower structure of the Abanico formation underneath the densely populated metropolitan area of Santiago, Chile. The seismic signals were recorded by a network consisting of 29 broadband seismological stations and 12 accelerograph stations, located in a 35 × 35 km2 quadrant. We used the average coherency of the vertical components to calculate dispersion curves from 0.1 to 5 Hz and Bootstrap resampling to estimate the variance of the travel times. The reliable frequency band of the dispersion curves was defined by an empirical method based on sign normalization of the coherency real part. The ambient noise tomography was solved on a domain discretized into 256 2 × 2 km2 cells. Using a regularized weighted least squares inversion, we inverted the observed travel-times between stations, assuming straight ray paths, in order to obtain 2D phase velocity maps from 0.2 Hz to 1.1 Hz, linearly spaced every 0.05 Hz, in 157 of the 256 square cells of the domain. In each square cell with information, dispersion curves were assembled and used to invert shear wave velocity profiles, which were interpolated using the ordinary Kriging method to obtain a 3D shear wave velocity model valid from 0.6 to 5 km depth. The 3D velocity model shows that the Abanico formation is stiffer in the south of the study area with larger velocity anomalies towards the shallower part of the model. The value of the shear wave velocity narrows with depth, reaching an average value of 3.5 km/s from 3 to 5 km depth.


Author(s):  
T Yudistira ◽  
J-P Metaxian ◽  
M Putriastuti ◽  
S Widiyantoro ◽  
N Rawlinson ◽  
...  

Summary Mt. Merapi, which lies just north of the city of Yogyakarta in Java, Indonesia, is one of the most active and dangerous volcanoes in the world. Thanks to its subduction zone setting, Mt Merapi is a stratovolcano, and rises to an elevation of 2968 m above sea level. It stands at the intersection of two volcanic lineaments, Ungaran–Telomoyo–Merbabu–Merapi (UTMM) and Lawu–Merapi–Sumbing–Sindoro–Slamet, which are oriented north-south and west-east, respectively. Although it has been the subject of many geophysical studies, Mt Merapi's underlying magmatic plumbing system is still not well understood. Here, we present the results of an ambient seismic noise tomography study, which comprise of a series of Rayleigh wave group velocity maps and a 3-D shear wave velocity model of the Merapi-Merbabu complex. A total of 10 months of continuous data (October 2013–July 2014) recorded by a network of 46 broadband seismometers were used. We computed and stacked daily cross-correlations from every pair of simultaneously recording stations to obtain the corresponding inter-station empirical Green's functions. Surface wave dispersion information was extracted from the cross-correlations using the multiple filtering technique, which provided us with an estimate of Rayleigh wave group velocity as a function of period. The group velocity maps for periods 3–12 s were then inverted to obtain shear wave velocity structure using the neighbourhood algorithm. From these results, we observe a dominant high velocity anomaly underlying Mt. Merapi and Mt. Merbabu with a strike of 152° N, which we suggest is evidence of old lava dating from the UTMM double-chain volcanic arc which formed Merbabu and Old Merapi. We also identify a low velocity anomaly on the southwest flank of Merapi which we interpret to be an active magmatic intrusion.


Author(s):  
B Pranata ◽  
T Yudistira ◽  
S Widiyantoro ◽  
B Brahmantyo ◽  
P R Cummins ◽  
...  

Summary We investigated the seismic shear wave velocity structure of the upper crust beneath the Bandung area in West Java, Indonesia, using ambient seismic noise tomography. We installed 60 seismographs to record ambient seismic noise continuously in the city of Bandung and its surrounding area for 8 months. After inter-station cross-correlation of recordings of ambient seismic noise, we obtained empirical Green's functions for Rayleigh waves. Group velocity dispersion curves for Rayleigh waves between periods of 1 s and 8 s were measured on each inter-station path by applying the multiple filter analysis method with phase-matched processing. The spatial variation of group velocities shows a good correlation with the geological structure of the Bandung Basin. The Rayleigh wave dispersion maps were inverted to obtain the 1D shear wave velocity profiles beneath each station, which were interpolated to infer a pseudo-3D structure under the study region. The results show that the Bandung Basin has a thick layer of sediment. Along the northern, eastern and southern mountains surrounding the Bandung Basin there is high-velocity structure, except to the west of the Tangkuban Parahu volcano, where a massive low-velocity structure extending throughout the upper crust might indicate the presence of fluids or partial melts.


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