Spelling suggestions: "subject:"seismology bservations"" "subject:"seismology abservations""
1 |
Travel time perturbations in the crust and upper mantle in the SoutheastVolz, William Richard 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
|
2 |
The structure of the earth's crust in the vicinity of Vancouver Island as ascertained by seismic and gravity observationsWhite, William Robert Hugh January 1962 (has links)
A seismic explosion program has been carried out in the Vancouver Island-Strait of Georgia area of Western Canada. The program included a relatively-intensive survey in the Strait of Georgia between Campbell River and the south end of Texada Island, as well as a number of longer range refraction lines extending from Kelsey Bay along the coast as far south as northern California, and east through the mountains to a distance of 700 km. Gravity readings were obtained at intervals of about ten km. along the east coast of Vancouver Island as well as for a number of east-west traverses. Readings were also obtained for a few locations on the British Columbia mainland. Except for a marked positive trend in the Victoria area, the regional value of the Bouguer anomaly for the Vancouver Island area is nearly zero.
The average structure for the area, derived from the seismic refraction observations consists of a layer of volcanic and granitic strata less than five km. in thickness, and an intermediate layer with a constant velocity for compressional waves of 6.66 km/sec, 46 km. thick. A velocity of about 7.7 km/sec. for the mantle has been observed along unreversed refraction lines, both along the coast and east through the mountains. Interpretation of the refraction observations has been based mainly on first arrival phases. The observed regional gravity anomaly is compatible with the crustal model obtained from the seismic results. / Science, Faculty of / Physics and Astronomy, Department of / Graduate
|
3 |
Derivation and practical application of exact time domain solutions for diffraction of acoustic waves by a half planeDalton, David Raymond January 1987 (has links)
The history of diffraction theory, exact frequency domain solutions and selected past time domain solutions are briefly reviewed. Exact time domain solutions for scattering of plane, cylindrical and spherical acoustic waves by a half plane are derived by inverse Fourier transforming the frequency domain integral solutions. The solutions consist of two diffraction terms, a reflected term and a direct term. The diffracting edge induces step function discontinuities in the direct and reflected terms at two shadow boundaries. At each boundary, the associated diffraction term reaches a maximum amplitude of half the geometrical optics term and has a signum function discontinuity, so that the total field remains continuous. A physical interpretation is developed in terms of Huygen's principle near the diffracting edge.
Solutions for practical point source configurations are evaluated by numerically convolving the impulse diffraction responses with a wavelet. The numerical problems presented by convolution with a singular, truncated operator are solved by analytically derived correction techniques, which are favourably compared to those used by earlier authors. The diffraction solution collapses into a compact discretized formulation. The half plane is shown to be a limiting form of wedge solutions, which can thus be computed using similar algorithms.
Two zero offset sections are produced and compared to approximate Kirchhoff integral solutions. The exact diffraction hyperbola is noticeably non-symmetric, with higher amplitudes on the reflector side of the edge. Near the apex of the hyperbola the Kirchhoff solution is nearly equivalent to the exact diffraction term symmetric in amplitude about the reflection shadow boundary but fails to describe the other, low amplitude, term equivalent to half the response of a line scatterer. The differences are more noticeable on the flanks of the hyperbola, where the two terms are comparable in amplitude, and at shallow depths, due to an aperture effect.
Increasing either the depth of the edge or the angle of the seismic line to the normal to the edge results in a flatter diffraction hyperbola showing little amplitude variation with moveout. As the seismic line becomes parallel to the edge the diffraction curve becomes flat and is indistinguishable from a reflection event. At great depth diffraction events may be mistaken for reflection events as well.
Examples of CDP and CSP gathers, when compared to the Common Offset (CO) gathers, demonstrate that CO gathers are optimal for diffraction processing. Also, since the diffraction moveout and reflection moveout curves differ widely except for depth points near the edge, normal moveout stacking will distort the diffractions and diffraction stacking is essential to retain diffraction information.
Strips of varying width are modelled by superposition of half planes to demonstrate resolution effects and show that the limit of a strip is a line scatterer. A dipping strip and an offset half plane model are produced and added for later comparison with wedge solutions. / Science, Faculty of / Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of / Graduate
|
4 |
A seismographic study of mid-continental primary wave travel timesHolmes, Jon Ferrell. January 1964 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1964 H75 / Master of Science
|
Page generated in 0.0808 seconds