scholarly journals Local Explosion Detection and Infrasound Localization by Reverse Time Migration Using 3-D Finite-Difference Wave Propagation

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Fee ◽  
Liam Toney ◽  
Keehoon Kim ◽  
Richard W. Sanderson ◽  
Alexandra M. Iezzi ◽  
...  

Infrasound data are routinely used to detect and locate volcanic and other explosions, using both arrays and single sensor networks. However, at local distances (<15 km) topography often complicates acoustic propagation, resulting in inaccurate acoustic travel times leading to biased source locations when assuming straight-line propagation. Here we present a new method, termed Reverse Time Migration-Finite-Difference Time Domain (RTM-FDTD), that integrates numerical modeling into the standard RTM back-projection process. Travel time information is computed across the entire potential source grid via FDTD modeling to incorporate the effects of topography. The waveforms are then back-projected and stacked at each grid point, with the stack maximum corresponding to the likely source. We apply our method to three volcanoes with different network configurations, source-receiver distances, and topography. At Yasur Volcano, Vanuatu, RTM-FDTD locates explosions within ∼20 m of the source and differentiates between multiple vents. RTM-FDTD produces a more accurate location for the two Yasur subcraters than standard RTM and doubles the number of detected events. At Sakurajima Volcano, Japan, RTM-FDTD locates the source within 50 m of the active vent despite notable topographic blocking. The RTM-FDTD location is similar to that from the Time Reversal Mirror method, but is more computationally efficient. Lastly, at Shishaldin Volcano, Alaska, RTM and RTM-FDTD both produce realistic source locations (<50 m) for ground-coupled airwaves recorded on a four-station seismic network. We show that RTM is an effective method to detect and locate infrasonic sources across a variety of scenarios, and by integrating numerical modeling, RTM-FDTD produces more accurate source locations and increases the detection capability.

Geophysics ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 62 (3) ◽  
pp. 906-917 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinming Zhu ◽  
Larry R. Lines

Reverse‐time migration applies finite‐difference wave equation solutions by using unaliased time‐reversed recorded traces as seismic sources. Recorded data can be sparsely or irregularly sampled relative to a finely spaced finite‐difference mesh because of the nature of seismic acquisition. Fortunately, reliable interpolation of missing traces is implicitly included in the reverse‐time wave equation computations. This implicit interpolation is essentially based on the ability of the wavefield to “heal itself” during propagation. Both synthetic and real data examples demonstrate that reverse‐time migration can often be performed effectively without the need for explicit interpolation of missing traces.


2016 ◽  
Vol 64 (5) ◽  
pp. 1605-1625 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongyong Yan ◽  
Lei Yang ◽  
Hengchang Dai ◽  
Xiang-Yang Li

Geophysics ◽  
1987 ◽  
Vol 52 (10) ◽  
pp. 1365-1375 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wen‐Fong Chang ◽  
George A. McMechan

Elastic, prestack, reverse‐time, finite‐difference migration of two‐component seismic surface data requires data extrapolation and application of an imaging condition. Data extrapolation involves synchronous driving of the vertical‐component and horizontal‐component finite‐difference meshes with the time reverse of the recorded vertical and horizontal traces, respectively. Extrapolation uses the coupled elastic wave equation for variable velocity solved with a second‐order, explicit finite‐difference scheme. The imaging condition at any point in the grid is the one‐way traveltime from the source to that point. Elastic migrations of both synthetic test data and real two‐component common‐source gathers produce simpler images than acoustic migrations because of the coalescing of double reflections (compressional waves and shear waves) into single loci.


Geophysics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 84 (6) ◽  
pp. S511-S522 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kai Gao ◽  
Lianjie Huang

Vector elastic reverse time migration (ERTM) produces subsurface elastic images with correct polarities using multicomponent seismic data. However, the decomposition of elastic wavefields into vector P- and S-wavefields is computationally expensive, particularly in heterogeneous and complex anisotropic media. We have developed a computationally efficient vector ERTM method in the hybrid time and frequency domain by combining three existing techniques. Rather than decomposing elastic wavefields into vector qP- and qS-wavefields during time-domain wavefield propagation, we conduct the wavefield decomposition in the frequency domain for several selected frequencies. In general, the number of selected frequencies needed for migration imaging is much smaller than the number of time steps during forward and backward wavefield propagation, leading to greatly reduced computational costs associated with the qP-/qS-wavefield vector separation in complex heterogeneous anisotropic media. We further combine an implicit directional wavefield separation into the vector ERTM to enhance the image quality. The numerical results demonstrate that our method produces high-quality elastic-wave migration images with notably reduced computational costs compared to the conventional vector ERTM method.


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