gy305 geophysics

26
GY305 GEOPHYSICS Seismology

Upload: others

Post on 11-Feb-2022

3 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

GY305 GEOPHYSICSSeismology

Page 2: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Seismology & Seismic Waves

• Seismology is the study of the transmission of seismic wave energy through the Earth

• 3 fundamental seismic waves• P-wave: compressional wave• S-wave: shear wave• Surface wave: wave that travels along the surface of the earth

• Seismic wave transmission can me used to remotely measure physical properties of the internal layers of the Earth:

• Transmission speed is proportional to density• Density contrasts cause reflection and refraction according to

Snell’s law• S-waves cannot be transmitted through a liquid

Page 3: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Physics of Seismic Waves

• P-wave: particle motion vibrates in the direction of wave-front travel

• S-wave: particle motion vibrates perpendicular to the direction of wave travel

• Surface Wave: composed of Rayleigh and Love waves:• Rayleigh: particle motion perpendicular to ground

surface• Love: particle motion parallel to ground surface

• P-waves and S-waves are considered “Body” waves because they travel through the Earth’s interior

• P-waves have higher velocities and therefore arrive at seismograph stations 1st

• S-waves have an intermediate velocity and arrive 2nd

• Surface waves are slower than P- or S- waves and therefore arrive last

Page 4: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

P- versus S-wave Particle Motion

P-wave S-wave

Page 5: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Rayleigh versus Love Components of Surface Waves

Page 6: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Relationship between Density and Seismic Velocity• Density versus Seismic wave velocity at (a) 0.2 GPa, (b) 0.6 GPa, and (c) 1.0

GPa confining pressure (depths = 6, 18, and 30 km)• Solid circles = Igneous & Metamorphic• Open circles = Sedimentary

Page 7: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Earthquake Seismology Terms

• Seismograph: instrument that records the arrival of seismic waves at the instrument location over time

• Seismic station network: global array of seismic stations built to detect the location and magnitude of seismic events, natural and man-made

• Epicenter: 2D location of seismic event on a map- requires latitude & longitude

• Focal Point: 3D location- latitude, longitude, and depth• Magnitude: measure of the release of energy from the

seismic event

Page 8: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Earthquake Epicentral Distance

• Because P-waves travel faster than S-waves the epicentral distance from the seismic station may be calculated

• The time differential (∆t) is proportional to the epicentral distance

1:00:00PM 1:00:10PM 1:00:20PM 1:00:30PM 1:00:40PM

P-wave S-wave

TP=1:00:05PM TS=1:00:12PM

∆t=1:00:12-1:00:05=7 secondsSeismic Station A

Page 9: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Graphical Plot of P- and S-Wave Epicentral Distances

Epicentral Distance (Km)

Time (sec.)

0 10 6020 70

5

10

15

20

∆t=7sec.

7sec.

Seismic Station A

Page 10: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Plotting Epicenter Location

Seismic Station

Epicentral Distance

A 23 kmB 57 kmC 30 km

A

B

C

Page 11: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Calculation of the Time of the Seismic Event

Epicentral Distance (Km)

Time (sec.)

0 10 6020 70

5

10

15

20

∆t=7sec.

• Once the epicentral distance is calculated the time of arrival of the P- or S-wave at any of the seismic stations can be used to calculate the time of the seismic event

P-wave travel time = 5 sec.

Seismic Event time = 1:00:05PM – 5 sec. = 1:00:00PM

Page 12: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Earthquake Magnitude

• All earthquake magnitude calculations (i,.e. Richter scale) are derived from the below equation:

• M = Log(A/T) + q(,h) + a• A = Amplitude of wave in 10-6 meters• T = period of wave in seconds• q = function correcting for () angular distance from

seismometer to epicenter, and for (h) the focal depth• a = an empirical constant that takes into account variations

specific to the seismic station and seismic instrument• Note the log scale – a magnitude 8 event releases

thousands of times the energy compared to a magnitude 5 event

Page 13: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Earthquake Magnitude Frequency

Magnitude Number per Year> 8.0 17 – 7.9 186 – 6.9 1085 - 5.9 8004-4.9 6,2003 – 3.9 49,0002-2.9 300,000

*Mean annual frequency of earthquakes recorded 1918-1945(Gutenberg and Richter, 1954)

Page 14: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Seismic Wave Paths in the Earth

• P- and S-waves travel in curved paths because of refraction

• Rapid density changes across contacts may also cause reflections

• S-waves will not transmit through the liquid outer core

Page 15: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Reflection, Refraction, and Snell’s Law

• Reflected ray paths match the incident angle indicated by the normal to the boundary

• Example:• Velocity medium 1 = 8.8 km/sec• Velocity medium 2 = 6.3 km/sec• Layer 1 incident angle = 40• V2 * sin (1) = V1 * sin(2)• 6.3 * sin 40 = 8.8 * sin 2• sin 2 = 6.3/8.8 * sin(40)• sin 2 = 0.726• 2 = 27.4

V1=8.8km/sec

V2=6.3km/sec

Page 16: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

1st Motion Studies and Fault Motion Solutions

• P-wave 1st arrivals at seismic stations will be either compressional or dilational

• This will indicate the relative fault block motion along a fracture and therefore the type of fault (normal, reverse, dextral, sinistral)

Sinistral strike-slip

Normal Dip-slip Reverse Dip-Slip

Page 17: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Dextral Strike-Slip Example of 1st Motion• Compressional 1st motion displays as a positive “up-tick” on strip chart• Dilational 1st motion displays as a negative “down-tick” on strip chart• Note that 1st motion gives 2 possible fault plane solutions- you need some

knowledge of the regional geology to determine the correct fault plane• Note that the intensity of the P-wave amplitude decreases to 0 at the nodal

plane

Page 18: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Example of Dextral Strike-Slip Motion on an East-West Transform

• Solid circles are compressional 1st Motions

• Open circles are dilational 1st

motions• Circles with crosses are low-

amplitude indeterminate

Page 19: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Example 1st Motion Data From Dip-Slip Faults

Normal Reverse

Page 20: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Example 1st Motions from Mid-Atlantic Ridge

Page 21: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Relationship of Seismic Wave Velocity to Earth’s Internal Layers

• Phase changes create rapid density changes

• Physical state (solid vs. liquid) generate velocity gradients

Page 22: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Potential Ray Paths due to Reflection and Refraction

• The ray path that moves along the layer interface is termed the “Head Wave”

Page 23: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Seismic Reflection

• Known quantities: shot point offset and geophone spacing

• Depth = Sqrt(((ray path dist)/2)^2-(ground dist)/2)^2)• Ray path dist = 2-way travel time * velocity

Page 24: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Seismic Reflection cont.

• 2-way travel times on a horizontal surface follow a hyperbolic trend

Page 25: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Seismic Reflection: Fault Offset

• Fault offset produces an offset in hyperbolic curve

Page 26: GY305 GEOPHYSICS

Consolidated Reflection Data

• Multiple Shot points are collected by computers and processed into a reflection profile

• Below is a profile through the Rio Grande Rift displaying the top of the rift magma chamber