4.6 Article

Estimation of micro-earthquake source locations based on full adjoint P and S wavefield imaging

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 226, Issue 3, Pages 2116-2144

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggab203

Keywords

Induced seismicity; Wave propagation; Computational seismology; Earthquake source observations; Body waves

Funding

  1. UT Dallas `3D+4D Seismic Full Waveform Inversion' research consortium

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A new wave-equation imaging method has been developed to locate micro-earthquakes with increased resolution and reduced location errors. By separating and extrapolating P and S wavefields, as well as using three source imaging conditions, clean images without noisy artefacts have been obtained for microseismic source estimations. The method shows high resolution source location images and is relatively insensitive to ambient noise, providing accurate results for surface monitoring data.
Locating micro-earthquakes with high resolution and accuracy is a challenge for traveltime inversion, which has uncertainty on the order of a Fresnel zone (many wavelengths). We develop a wave-equation imaging method to increase resolution and reduce location errors to less than a wavelength, but requires very densely deployed receiver arrays with wide aperture and considerable computational cost. Instead of using acoustic data or direct P wave arrivals only, we use elastic multicomponent data and present a new method that uses the full P and S adjoint wavefields to image the microseismic source locations. We separate the P and S waves from the data, and extrapolate the P and S wavefields of each receiver subarray by solving the P and S adjoint wave equations in parallel. We formulate three source imaging conditions by multiplying over subarrays the adjoint P wavefield (I-P), S wavefield (I-S) and cross-correlated P and S wavefields (I-PS). We perform numerical experiments on the highly realistic SEG SEAM4D reservoir model using surface acquisition array geometries. Results for 2-D and 3-D microseismic source estimations show clean images without noisy artefacts at shallow depths. In particular, I-PS provides the highest resolution source location image, while I-P is limited by the P wavelength and I-S is influenced by small coda artefacts. The major-axis alignment and resolution of the source location image are determined by the hypocentral location with respect to the receiver array and illumination-angle coverage, respectively. We discuss the impacts of S-wave attenuation and frequency bandwidth on the source location images. Noise tests indicate that the imaging results are relatively insensitive to ambient noise, as is observed for the surface monitoring data. Using smoothed velocity models, the imaging results are similar to the results using the true realistically heterogeneous velocity model. The 90 per cent confidence ellipse of the source location due to Gaussian-distributed velocity errors shows a larger depth error as the source becomes deeper, while the horizontal error does not change as much.

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