4.6 Article

The point-spread function measure of resolution for the 3-D electrical resistivity experiment

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 176, Issue 2, Pages 405-414

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-246X.2008.04003.x

Keywords

Inverse theory; Tomography; Electrical properties; Hydrogeophysics; Hydrology

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. Inland Northwest Research Alliance
  3. EPAX970085-01-0
  4. NSF-EPSCOR [EPS0132626]

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The solution appraisal component of the inverse problem involves investigation of the relationship between our estimated model and the actual model. However, full appraisal is difficult for large 3-D problems such as electrical resistivity tomography (ERT). We tackle the appraisal problem for 3-D ERT via the point-spread functions (PSFs) of the linearized resolution matrix. The PSFs represent the impulse response of the inverse solution and quantify our parameter-specific resolving capability. We implement an iterative least-squares solution of the PSF for the ERT experiment, using on-the-fly calculation of the sensitivity via an adjoint integral equation with stored Green's functions and subgrid reduction. For a synthetic example, analysis of individual PSFs demonstrates the truly 3-D character of the resolution. The PSFs for the ERT experiment are Gaussian-like in shape, with directional asymmetry and significant off-diagonal features. Computation of attributes representative of the blurring and localization of the PSF reveal significant spatial dependence of the resolution with some correlation to the electrode infrastructure. Application to a time-lapse ground-water monitoring experiment demonstrates the utility of the PSF for assessing feature discrimination, predicting artefacts and identifying model dependence of resolution. For a judicious selection of model parameters, we analyse the PSFs and their attributes to quantify the case-specific localized resolving capability and its variability over regions of interest. We observe approximate interborehole resolving capability of less than 1-1.5 m in the vertical direction and less than 1-2.5 m in the horizontal direction. Resolving capability deteriorates significantly outside the electrode infrastructure.

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