scholarly journals Full moment tensor inversion constrained by double-couple focal mechanism for induced seismicity

2020 ◽  
Vol 33 (4) ◽  
pp. 177-193
Author(s):  
Yuyang Tan ◽  
◽  
Haijiang Zhang ◽  
Junlun Li ◽  
Chen Yin ◽  
...  
2013 ◽  
Vol 195 (2) ◽  
pp. 1267-1281 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Tolga Sen ◽  
Simone Cesca ◽  
Monika Bischoff ◽  
Thomas Meier ◽  
Torsten Dahm

2020 ◽  
Vol 110 (5) ◽  
pp. 2112-2123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernard Dost ◽  
Annemijn van Stiphout ◽  
Daniela Kühn ◽  
Marloes Kortekaas ◽  
Elmer Ruigrok ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Recent developments in the densification of the seismic network covering the Groningen gas field allow a more detailed study of the connection between induced seismicity and reactivated faults around the gas reservoir at 3 km depth. With the reduction of the average station distance from 20 km to 4–5 km, a probabilistic full-waveform moment tensor inversion procedure could be applied, resulting in both improved hypocenter location accuracy and full moment tensor solutions for events of M≥2.0 recorded in the period 2016–2019. Hypocenter locations as output from the moment tensor inversion are compared to locations from the application of other methods and are found similar within 250 m distance. Moment tensor results show that the double-couple (DC) solutions are in accordance with the known structure, namely normal faulting along 50°–70° dipping faults. Comparison with reprocessed 3D seismic sections, extended to a depth of 6–7 km, demonstrate that (a) most events occur along faults with a small throw and (b) reactivated faults in the reservoir often continue downward in the Carboniferous underburden. From non-DC contributions, the isotropic (ISO) component is dominant and shows consistent negative values, which is expected in a compacting medium. There is some indication that events connected to faults with a large throw (>70  m) exhibit the largest ISO component (40%–50%).


2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (7) ◽  
pp. 505-512
Author(s):  
Christopher Willacy ◽  
Jan-Willem Blokland ◽  
Ewoud van Dedem

Permanent reservoir monitoring is important for cases of induced seismicity in which there may be a risk to people or to the environment. In such cases, accurately locating microearthquakes and assessing their hazard level can help keep production at safe levels. The process can benefit greatly from the use of automation. With the shift toward full-waveform microearthquake location algorithms and workflows, greater accuracy and information can be retrieved compared to that offered by traditional traveltime estimation techniques, but the complexity of these workflows and run-time costs can be higher. Results are presented from an automatic elastic event location and moment tensor inversion workflow that has been highly parallelized on clustered computer hardware. Run times that previously took up to several days to complete using a manually intensive execution of the workflow now can be achieved in approximately 1 hour. Some 180 events recorded at the Groningen gas field and ranging in magnitude from 0.1 to 3.4 MW (ML) have been located and analyzed with the automatic workflow. The results indicate equivalent location accuracy when compared to the manually intensive workflow execution. However, larger errors are noted in the depth positions of some events and in the range and nature of the focal mechanism, as derived from moment tensor inversion. High grading of the manual and automatic results has been performed and used to study the geomechanical behavior of the microearthquakes in the Groningen region, which exhibit mainly dip-slip, double-couple motion, in areas of previous production activity.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saulė Simutė ◽  
Lion Krischer ◽  
Christian Boehm ◽  
Martin Vallée ◽  
Andreas Fichtner

<p>We present a proof-of-concept catalogue of full-waveform seismic source solutions for the Japanese Islands area. Our method is based on the Bayesian inference of source parameters and a tomographically derived heterogeneous Earth model, used to compute Green’s strain tensors. We infer the full moment tensor, location and centroid time of the seismic events in the study area.</p><p>To compute spatial derivatives of Green’s functions, we use a previously derived regional Earth model (Simutė et al., 2016). The model is radially anisotropic, visco-elastic, and fully heterogeneous. It was constructed using full waveforms in the period band of 15–80 s.</p><p>Green’s strains are computed numerically with the spectral-element solver SES3D (Gokhberg & Fichtner, 2016). We exploit reciprocity, and by treating seismic stations as virtual sources we compute and store the wavefield across the domain. This gives us a strain database for all potential source-receiver pairs. We store the wavefield for more than 50 F-net broadband stations (www.fnet.bosai.go.jp). By assuming an impulse response as the source time function, the displacements are then promptly obtained by linear combination of the pre-computed strains scaled by the moment tensor elements.</p><p>With a feasible number of model parameters and the fast forward problem we infer the unknowns in a Bayesian framework. The fully probabilistic approach allows us to obtain uncertainty information as well as inter-parameter trade-offs. The sampling is performed with a variant of the Hamiltonian Monte Carlo algorithm, which we developed previously (Fichtner and Simutė, 2017). We apply an L2 misfit on waveform data, and we work in the period band of 15–80 s.</p><p>We jointly infer three location parameters, timing and moment tensor components. We present two sets of source solutions: 1) full moment tensor solutions, where the trace is free to vary away from zero, and 2) moment tensor solutions with the isotropic part constrained to be zero. In particular, we study events with significant non-double-couple component. Preliminary results of ~Mw 5 shallow to intermediate depth events indicate that proper incorporation of 3-D Earth structure results in solutions becoming more double-couple like. We also find that improving the Global CMT solutions in terms of waveform fit requires a very good 3-D Earth model and is not trivial.</p>


1999 ◽  
Vol 12 (6) ◽  
pp. 609-617 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong-Mao Zhou ◽  
Yun-Tai Chen ◽  
Zhong-Liang Wu

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document