Automatic Event-Detection and Time-Picking Algorithms for Downhole Microseismic Data Processing

Author(s):  
J. Akram ◽  
D. Eaton ◽  
A. St. Onge
2013 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 10443-10480 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. L. Brantley ◽  
G. S. W. Hagler ◽  
S. Kimbrough ◽  
R. W. Williams ◽  
S. Mukerjee ◽  
...  

Abstract. The collection of real-time air quality measurements while in motion (i.e., mobile monitoring) is currently conducted worldwide to evaluate in situ emissions, local air quality trends, and air pollutant exposure. This measurement strategy pushes the limits of traditional data analysis with complex second-by-second multipollutant data varying as a function of time and location. Data reduction and filtering techniques are often applied to deduce trends, such as pollutant spatial gradients downwind of a highway. However, rarely do mobile monitoring studies report the sensitivity of their results to the chosen data processing approaches. The study being reported here utilized a large mobile monitoring dataset collected on a roadway network in central North Carolina to explore common data processing strategies including time-alignment, short-term emissions event detection, background estimation, and averaging techniques. One-second time resolution measurements of ultrafine particles ≤ 100 nm in diameter (UFPs), black carbon (BC), particulate matter (PM), carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO2), and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) were collected on twelve unique driving routes that were repeatedly sampled. Analyses demonstrate that the multiple emissions event detection strategies reported produce generally similar results and that utilizing a median (as opposed to a mean) as a summary statistic may be sufficient to avoid bias in near-source spatial trends. Background levels of the pollutants are shown to vary with time, and the estimated contributions of the background to the mean pollutant concentrations were: BC (6%), PM2.5–10 (12%), UFPs (19%), CO (38%), PM10 (45%), NO2 (51%), PM2.5 (56%), and CO2 (86%). Lastly, while temporal smoothing (e.g., 5 s averages) results in weak pair-wise correlation and the blurring of spatial trends, spatial averaging (e.g., 10 m) is demonstrated to increase correlation and refine spatial trends.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leonardo van der Laat ◽  
Ronald J.L. Baldares ◽  
Esteban J. Chaves ◽  
Esteban Meneses

2015 ◽  
Vol 21 (S3) ◽  
pp. 2329-2330
Author(s):  
Jeremy R. Teuton ◽  
Richard L. Griswold ◽  
B. Layla Mehdi ◽  
Nigel D.Browning

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