New Constraints on Fault-Zone Structure from Seismic Guided Waves

The structure of fault zones (FZs) plays an important role in understanding fault mechanics, earthquake rupture and seismic hazards. Fault zone seismic guided waves (GW) carry important information about internal structure of the low-velocity fault damage zone. Numerical modeling of observed FZGWs h...

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Main Author: Wu, Jiedi
Other Authors: Geosciences
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28873
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09052008-151838/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-288732021-03-16T05:32:25Z New Constraints on Fault-Zone Structure from Seismic Guided Waves Wu, Jiedi Geosciences Hole, John A. Snoke, J. Arthur Chapman, Martin C. Spotila, James A. Zhou, Ying fault zones guided waves low-velocity zone wave propagation finite difference velocity structure dispersion curve earthquakes and refraction The structure of fault zones (FZs) plays an important role in understanding fault mechanics, earthquake rupture and seismic hazards. Fault zone seismic guided waves (GW) carry important information about internal structure of the low-velocity fault damage zone. Numerical modeling of observed FZGWs has been used to construct models of FZ structure. However, the depth extent of the waveguide and the uniqueness of deep structure in the models have been debated. Elastic finite-difference synthetic seismograms were generated for FZ models that include an increase in seismic velocity with depth both inside and outside the FZ. Strong GWs were created from sources both in and out of the waveguide, in contrast with previous homogenous-FZ studies that required an in-fault source to create GW. This is because the frequency-dependent trapping efficiency of the waveguide changes with depth. The near-surface fault structure efficiently guides waves at lower frequencies than the deeper fault. Fault structure at seismogenic depth requires the analysis of data at higher frequencies than the GWs that dominate at the surface. Adapting a two-station technique from surface wave studies, dispersive differential group arrival times between two earthquakes can be used to solve for FZ structures between the earthquakes. This method was tested with synthetic data and shallow events recorded in the SAFOD borehole in the San Andreas Fault. A pair of deep earthquakes recorded in the SAFOD borehole indicate a ~150 m wide San Andreas Fault waveguide with >20% velocity contrast at 10-12 km depth. With additional earthquakes, the full FZ structure at seismogenic depth could be imaged. Subsurface FZ structure can also be derived from a surface source and receiver array analogous to a body-wave refraction survey. Synthetic seismograms for such source-receiver geometry were generated and verified that FZGWs are refracted by the increase in velocity with depth. Synthetic data from a surface array were successfully inverted to derive FZ structure in the subsurface. The new methods presented in this dissertation extend the potential of FZGWs to image deeper FZ structure than has been uniquely constrained in the past. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:15:55Z 2014-03-14T20:15:55Z 2008-09-01 2008-09-05 2008-09-26 2008-09-26 Dissertation etd-09052008-151838 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28873 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09052008-151838/ Wu_2008_Thesis_IIH.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic fault zones
guided waves
low-velocity zone
wave propagation
finite difference
velocity structure
dispersion curve
earthquakes
and refraction
spellingShingle fault zones
guided waves
low-velocity zone
wave propagation
finite difference
velocity structure
dispersion curve
earthquakes
and refraction
Wu, Jiedi
New Constraints on Fault-Zone Structure from Seismic Guided Waves
description The structure of fault zones (FZs) plays an important role in understanding fault mechanics, earthquake rupture and seismic hazards. Fault zone seismic guided waves (GW) carry important information about internal structure of the low-velocity fault damage zone. Numerical modeling of observed FZGWs has been used to construct models of FZ structure. However, the depth extent of the waveguide and the uniqueness of deep structure in the models have been debated. Elastic finite-difference synthetic seismograms were generated for FZ models that include an increase in seismic velocity with depth both inside and outside the FZ. Strong GWs were created from sources both in and out of the waveguide, in contrast with previous homogenous-FZ studies that required an in-fault source to create GW. This is because the frequency-dependent trapping efficiency of the waveguide changes with depth. The near-surface fault structure efficiently guides waves at lower frequencies than the deeper fault. Fault structure at seismogenic depth requires the analysis of data at higher frequencies than the GWs that dominate at the surface. Adapting a two-station technique from surface wave studies, dispersive differential group arrival times between two earthquakes can be used to solve for FZ structures between the earthquakes. This method was tested with synthetic data and shallow events recorded in the SAFOD borehole in the San Andreas Fault. A pair of deep earthquakes recorded in the SAFOD borehole indicate a ~150 m wide San Andreas Fault waveguide with >20% velocity contrast at 10-12 km depth. With additional earthquakes, the full FZ structure at seismogenic depth could be imaged. Subsurface FZ structure can also be derived from a surface source and receiver array analogous to a body-wave refraction survey. Synthetic seismograms for such source-receiver geometry were generated and verified that FZGWs are refracted by the increase in velocity with depth. Synthetic data from a surface array were successfully inverted to derive FZ structure in the subsurface. The new methods presented in this dissertation extend the potential of FZGWs to image deeper FZ structure than has been uniquely constrained in the past. === Ph. D.
author2 Geosciences
author_facet Geosciences
Wu, Jiedi
author Wu, Jiedi
author_sort Wu, Jiedi
title New Constraints on Fault-Zone Structure from Seismic Guided Waves
title_short New Constraints on Fault-Zone Structure from Seismic Guided Waves
title_full New Constraints on Fault-Zone Structure from Seismic Guided Waves
title_fullStr New Constraints on Fault-Zone Structure from Seismic Guided Waves
title_full_unstemmed New Constraints on Fault-Zone Structure from Seismic Guided Waves
title_sort new constraints on fault-zone structure from seismic guided waves
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/28873
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-09052008-151838/
work_keys_str_mv AT wujiedi newconstraintsonfaultzonestructurefromseismicguidedwaves
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