layered viscoelastic medium
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2020 ◽  
Vol 165 ◽  
pp. 03013
Author(s):  
He Wei ◽  
Shi Fuqiang ◽  
Liu Pan ◽  
Gu Yunhe

Taking the altyn fault zone as the study area, the maxwell layered viscoelastic medium model and the PSGRN / PSCMP program were used to study the evolution of the cumulative coulomb stress over the altyn fault from 1900 to 2020, analyze the future seismic hazards of faults in the altyn fault zone. The results show that: the minfeng earthquake and changma earthquake were mainly caused by the long-term tectonic loading of the altyn fault. The wuzunxiaoer S8 section and the shulehe 4 S18 south section were affected by the combined effects of the changma earthquake and long-term earthquake loading. In particular, the maximum cumulative coulomb stress of shulehe 4 S18 south section is 2.58Mpa,which is a great danger to strong earthquakes.


Geophysics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 84 (3) ◽  
pp. T147-T166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vishal Das ◽  
Tapan Mukerji ◽  
Gary Mavko

We have used numerical modeling of normal incidence P-waves in periodic and nonperiodic viscoelastic layered media to help improve understanding of the scale effects of heterogeneity on velocity dispersion and attenuation. The improved understanding of these effects facilitates better interpretation and integration of data acquired at different scales, such as seismic data, well-log data, and laboratory measurements. We developed a direct method for estimating velocity and attenuation for viscoelastic media, the viscoelastic Kennett-Frazer (vKF) method, which is an invariant imbedding (reflectivity) method that uses reflection and transmission transfer functions. The vKF method is used to estimate rigorous dispersion and attenuation curves for periodic and nonperiodic cases. The results from our studies validate and quantify the intuitive qualitative understanding that dispersion and attenuation for a layered viscoelastic medium depend on the ratio of wavelength of the waves ([Formula: see text]) and the spatial period of the medium ([Formula: see text]), similar to the elastic case. We also decoupled the total effective attenuation obtained from the viscoelastic case into scattering attenuation that can be modeled from the elastic case and the intrinsic effective attenuation that is present in addition to the scattering attenuation in the viscoelastic case. The calculated intrinsic effective attenuation curves matched the theoretical values at the ray theory and effective medium theory limits. We derived analytical expressions for the long-wavelength limit of velocity and attenuation in a viscoelastic medium. Our expressions can be used directly for the upscaling of well logs to seismic scale considering viscoelastic effects. The expressions indicate the coupling between effective velocity and effective intrinsic attenuation in the long-wavelength limit. Finally, we use the derived expressions to determine the difference between elastic versus viscoelastic upscaling and to highlight the impact on traveltime and amplitude by properly considering viscoelastic information, especially for quantitative seismic interpretation workflows.


2015 ◽  
Vol 60 (11) ◽  
pp. 4295-4312 ◽  
Author(s):  
Salavat R Aglyamov ◽  
Shang Wang ◽  
Andrei B Karpiouk ◽  
Jiasong Li ◽  
Michael Twa ◽  
...  

Geophysics ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 49 (8) ◽  
pp. 1374-1380 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. S. Krebes

The mathematical theory which is typically used to model the intrinsic anelasticity of the earth is the linear theory of viscoelasticity. The effects of anelasticity on wave propagation, such as absorption and dispersion, are often described using one‐dimensional (1-D) plane waves of the form [Formula: see text] with k complex and frequency‐dependent. These waves are solutions of the 1-D viscoelastic wave equation. The reflection and transmission of plane waves in a layered viscoelastic medium is, however, a 2-D or 3-D problem. The solutions to the 2-D or 3-D viscoelastic wave equation are the so‐called general plane waves, which are classified as homogeneous or inhomogeneous depending upon whether or not the planes of constant phase, i.e., wavefronts, coincide with the planes of constant amplitude (the 1-D plane waves mentioned above are strictly homogeneous).


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