4.4 Article

Inter-Source Interferometry of Seismic Body Waves: Required Conditions and Examples

Journal

PURE AND APPLIED GEOPHYSICS
Volume 178, Issue 9, Pages 3441-3460

Publisher

SPRINGER BASEL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s00024-021-02814-y

Keywords

Seismic interferometry; inter-source interferometry; Fresnel integral; body waves; fault zone; San Andreas Fault

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Seismic interferometry is a widely used technique for retrieving wavefields between receivers and can be extended to retrieve waves between two seismic sources, known as inter-source interferometry. The accuracy of estimating P-waves between two sources using this method is dependent on the accuracy of the earthquake catalog. Using inter-source interferometry, direct body waves and potentially coda waves can be recovered accurately under certain conditions.
Seismic interferometry is widely applied to retrieve wavefields propagating between receivers. Another version of seismic interferometry, called inter-source interferometry, uses the principles of seismic reciprocity and expands interferometric applications to retrieve waves that propagate between two seismic sources. Previous studies of inter-source interferometry usually involve surface-wave and coda-wave estimations. We use inter-source interferometry to estimate the P-waves propagating between two sources rather than the estimation of surface waves and coda waves. We show that the recovered arrival times are dependent on the accuracy of the earthquake catalog of the two sources. Using inter-source interferometry, one can recover the waveform of the direct body waves and potentially reconstruct the waveform of coda waves, depending on the source-receiver geometry. The retrieval of these waveforms is accurate only when the wavefield is sampled with approximately 4 receivers per wavelength in the stationary phase zone. We show that using only receivers inside the stationary phase region for inter-source interferometry introduces the phase error of approximately 0.3 radians. In our study, we show an example of the P-wavefield reconstruction between two earthquakes using the seismic records from an array along San Andreas Fault. The retrieved P waves give a qualitative estimation of the thickness of the low-velocity zone of San Andreas Fault of approximately 4 km.

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